Non-invasive monitoring cancer using integrated microfluidic profiling of circulating microvesicles

ABSTRACT

A microfluidic exosome profiling platform integrating exosome isolation and targeted proteomic analysis is disclosed. This platform is capable of quantitative exosomal biomarker profiling directly from plasma samples with markedly enhanced sensitivity and specificity. Identification of distinct subpopulation of patient-derived exosomes is demonstrated by probing surface proteins and multiparameter analyses of intravesicular biomarkers in the selected subpopulation. The expression of IGF-1R and its phosphorylation level in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patient plasma is assessed as a non-invasive alternative to the conventional biopsy and immunohistochemistry. Detection of ovarian cancer also is assessed. The microfluidic chip, which may be fabricated of a glass substrate and a layer of poly(dimethylsiloxane), includes a serpentine microchannel to mix a fluid and a microchamber for the collection and detection of exosomes.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 15/125,822, filed Sep. 13, 2016, which is a national phase application of PCT/US15/20683 filed Mar. 16, 2015, and which claims priority to the provisional patent application filed Mar. 14, 2014 and assigned U.S. App. No. 61/953,109 and to the provisional patent application filed Jul. 16, 2014 and assigned U.S. App. No. 62/025,151. This application also claims priority to the provisional patent application filed Nov. 20, 2015 and assigned U.S. App. No. 62/258,258. The disclosures of each of these applications is hereby incorporated by reference.

STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY-SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT

This disclosure was made with government support under grant numbers Ca186846 and GM103638 awarded by the National Institutes of Health. The government has certain rights in the disclosure.

BACKGROUND OF THE DISCLOSURE

Developing non-invasive blood-based tests is extremely appealing for presymptomatic screening and early detection of cancers where obtaining tissue biopsy is highly invasive, difficult, or costly, such as lung cancer and ovarian cancer. This is particularly true for many primary tumors and most metastatic diseases. Probing circulating exosomes is an emerging paradigm for non-invasive cancer diagnosis and monitoring of treatment. Most eukaryotic cells release numerous membrane-derived vesicles into extracellular environment which are mainly composed of exosomes (30-150 nm) and microvesicles (200-1000 nm) differing in their cellular origin, abundance and biogenesis. Exosomes are commonly recognized as membrane vesicles derived from the endolysosomal pathway with a size range of approximately 30-150 nm, and are abundantly found in the plasma and malignant effusions derived from cancer patients. Exosomes share certain common characteristics, including shape, size, density, and general protein composition, and mediate effects via transfer of cargo consisting of an array of proteins, selected functional cellular RNAs, and mitochondrial DNA. Despite the potential for cancer research, exosome analyses have been severely constrained by the daunting technical difficulties in isolation and molecular analysis of such nano-scale and molecularly diverse vesicles. Current isolation protocols largely rely on multiple ultracentrifugation steps, which are tedious, time-consuming (>10 h) and inefficient. Moreover, differential ultracentrifugation co-purifies several microvesicle subpopulations which are secreted by different intracellular mechanisms, and thus could potentially mask the disease-related biosignature. Size exclusion methods normally do not concentrate exosomes and are prone to pressure-caused damage of vesicles and contaminations. Molecular analysis of isolated microvesicles is primarily performed using Western blot, ELISA and mass spectrometry, which require lengthy processes and large sample sizes (purified from more than 3 mL plasma or 300 mL cell culture media), limiting the progress in clinical investigation and utilities of exosomes. To date, no well-defined protocols and markers for quantitative evaluation of extracellular vesicle proteins exist.

Microfluidic technology has shown unique advantages in bioassays, such as ultrahigh throughput, single molecule/cell sensitivity and resolution, multifunctional integration, and automated operation with minimal sample consumption, to facilitate quantitative biology and medicine. Although recent advance of microfluidic technology has made an impact on many areas of biology, there is an ongoing need for microfluidic technology to accelerate exosome analysis.

SUMMARY OF THE DISCLOSURE

This disclosure, which is more fully described under the Detailed Description section below, provides in certain embodiments a “sample-in-answer-out” microfluidic exosome profiling platform which integrates exosome isolation and targeted proteomic analysis in one rapid assay. We demonstrate utility of two microfluidic devices and methods of using them for quantitative profiling of surface exosomal biomarker and intravesicle biomarkers individually, directly from 30 μL plasma samples within ˜100 min, with markedly enhanced sensitivity and specificity compared to previously available approaches.

Microfluidic chips, which can be an example of a microelectromechanical systems (MEMS) device, typically range in size from a few square millimeters to a few square centimeters. These microfluidic chips are designed to handle or manipulate small fluid volumes in order to perform biological or medical processing or testing. The fluids may be moved, mixed, or processed in a single microfluidic chip.

Microfluidic chips provide multiple advantages over conventional testing. The presently provided microfluidic chips use smaller volumes of fluids, provide faster results, are more compact and require less manual operation and lab space, increase testing throughput, reduce costs, reduce technician exposure to fluids due to the smaller amounts of fluids that are required, and can increase patient comfort due to the smaller amounts of body fluids that are required for testing. The design of these microfluidic chips can vary by applications, and each variation can use a form of microfluidics to enable fluid flow to various regions in the chip.

In this disclosure, we report for the first time an integrated microfluidic approach that enables on-chip immunoisolation and in situ analysis of exosome surface and intravesicular proteins directly from patient plasma. To this end, a cascading microfluidic circuit was designed to streamline and expedite the multi-step assay, including exosome isolation and enrichment, on-line chemical lysis and target capture, and sandwich immunoassay assisted by chemifluorescence detection.

We have employed this platform to provide a non-limiting proof of its diagnostic utility by using it to measure the expression levels of total and phosphorylated type 1 insulin growth factor receptor (IGF-1R) in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patient plasma-derived circulating exosomes, which opens a new avenue for monitoring a wide variety of biomarkers and subtle distinctions between them. For example, we are able to discriminate IGF-1R and its activation status in a non-invasive manner as a liquid biopsy. We selected IGF-1R in part because it is a pivotal therapeutic target in NSCLC and other cancers. However, current clinical assessment of IGF-1R expression primarily relies on immunohistochemistry (IHC) of tumor tissue sections. The majority of NSCLC patients present with unresectable advanced disease, thus obtaining adequate tissue biopsies prior to each therapy for diagnosis and prognosis is extremely challenging, which is invasive and substantially limits the histologic and molecular information. Overall we demonstrate the ability of this platform to detect specific circulating microvesicular markers directly from patient plasma samples, in support of using circulating microvesicles for monitoring IGF-1R during therapy of NSCLC patients. Thus, it is expected that the device and methods of using it will be broadly applicable to a wide variety of markers that are, for example, detectable in exosomes or other membranous structures present in liquid biological samples.

A microfluidic chip is provided in a first embodiment. The microfluidic chip, which may be fabricated of a glass substrate, and a layer of any suitable coating, such as poly(dimethylsiloxane), includes a first capture chamber, a second capture chamber, a serpentine microchannel, a first microchannel, a second microchannel, a sample inlet, a buffer inlet, a bead inlet, at least a first connector channel, and a reagent inlet. The first capture chamber is configured to enable immunomagnetic isolation and can be configured to isolate magnetic microbeads with bound exosomes from a fluid sample. The second capture chamber is configured to enable protein analysis. In an embodiment, the first capture chamber and the second capture chamber can be approximately 4 mm in diameter and can each capture up to approximately 10⁹ 2.8 μm microbeads. The serpentine microchannel connects the first capture chamber and the second capture chamber and can have at least one surface that is hydrophilic. The first microchannel connects the first capture chamber and the serpentine microchannel. The second microchannel connects the serpentine microchannel and the second capture chamber. The sample inlet is connected to the first capture chamber. The buffer inlet is connected to the first capture chamber. The first connector channel is connected to the bead inlet and the first microchannel such that the first connector channel is connected to the first microchannel upstream of the serpentine microchannel and downstream of the first capture chamber. The first connector channel can have dimensions configured to enable magnetic microbeads to pass there through. The reagent inlet is connected to the second microchannel upstream of the second capture chamber and downstream of the serpentine microchannel.

A second connector channel can be connected to the bead inlet and the first microchannel such that the second connector channel is connected to the first microchannel upstream of the serpentine microchannel and downstream of the first capture chamber.

At least one syringe pump can be connected to one of the sample inlet, the buffer inlet, the bead inlet, or the reagent inlet. The syringe pump is configured to have picoliter resolution. For example, a four-syringe pump can be connected to the sample inlet, the buffer inlet, the bead inlet, and the reagent inlet.

A magnet can be positioned opposite of a surface of the microfluidic chip.

An outlet can be connected to the second capture chamber.

A microfluidic chip is provided in a second embodiment. The microfluidic chip, which may be fabricated of a glass substrate and a layer of poly(dimethylsiloxane), includes an injector, a serpentine fluidic mixer, a microchamber, and an outlet. The injector has a plasma inlet and a magnetic bead inlet. The serpentine fluidic mixer is in fluid communication with the injector and is configured to mix a fluid. The microchamber (e.g., 4 mm in diameter) is in fluid communication with the serpentine fluidic mixer. The microchamber is configured for collection and detection of exosomes. The microfluidic chip is configured for continuous flow between the injector and the outlet. The microfluidic chip is configured to provide exosome capture and/or lysis in the microfluidic chip. The injector can be Y-shaped with injection channels connecting the plasma inlet and the magnetic bead inlet to the serpentine fluidic mixer.

At least one syringe pump can be connected to the injector. The syringe pump is configured to have picoliter resolution.

A magnet can be positioned opposite of a surface of the microfluidic chip.

The microfluidic chip can be configured to use from 10 μL to 20 μL of fluid.

A method of diagnosis, for aiding in diagnosis, or for monitoring treatment of a subject is provided in a second embodiment. A microfluidic chip, such as that disclosed herein, is used to process a sample obtained or derived from the subject. A signal is detected from a detectably labeled antibody that is specifically bound to a marker, including but not necessarily limited to a protein marker, which was present in the sample obtained or derived from the subject. The signal from the detectably labeled antibody is generated in the second capture chamber.

The sample that is tested using the device and method of the present disclosure can be any suitable sample. In embodiments, the sample is liquid biological sample. In an embodiment, the sample is plasma. In embodiments, a liquid biological sample is used directly, without processing before introducing the sample into the device. In embodiments, the protein marker is any protein that is positively correlated with a condition, such as a disease or other disorder. In one embodiment the marker comprises a cancer marker. In embodiments, the device is suitable for testing a sample obtained or derived from any animal. In an embodiment, the animal is mammal. In an embodiment, the mammal is a human. In another embodiment, the mammal is a non-human mammal. The device and method are accordingly suitable for use in human and veterinary diagnostic approaches.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES

FIG. 1 shows an example of an integrated microfluidic exosome analysis directly from human plasma. (A) Image of the prototype PDMS chip containing a cascading microchannel network for multi-stage exosome analysis. (B) Streamlined workflow for on-chip immunomagnetic isolation, chemical lysis, and intravesicular protein analysis of circulating exosomes. #1-4 indicates the inlet for exosome-capture beads, washing/lysis buffer, protein-capture beads, and ELISA reagents, respectively. (C, D) Typical TEM images of exosomes from NSCLC (C) and ovarian cancer plasma (D) isolated by the microfluidic immunomagnetic method. The magnetic beads were conjugated with anti-EpCAM and anti-CA125 antibodies for NSCLC and ovarian cancer, respectively. (E, F) TEM images showing large aggregates (E) and other membranous particles (F) observed in the ultracentrifugation-purified vesicles, as indicated by white arrows. FIG. 2. Microfluidic immunomagnetic capture of circulating exosomes. (A) Plot of the amount of beads captured in the chamber represented by the aggregate area fraction as a function of total infusion volume (circle) and flow rate (square). The error bars are standard deviations (n=3). Inset: bright-field image of capturing magnetic beads in the 1st capture chamber. Scale bar is 100 μm. (B) Representative TEM images showing enriched exosomes on the surface of antibody-conjugated beads from NSCLC and ovarian cancer (OVCA) samples, while significantly less vesicles from healthy plasma and almost no vesicles for the negative control beads without specific antibodies. (C) Representative size histograms for on-chip isolated exosomes from NSCLC (EpCAM+, n=130) and OVCA (CA125+, n=130), compared to that of ultracentrifugation-purified NSCLC vesicles measured by NTA using NanoSight (insets). The size was obtained from averaging five measurements. Dot plots are Log-normal fitting (R²>0.98). Scale bars: 100 nm. FIG. 3. Microfluidic isolation and surface phenotyping of circulating exosomes in cancer. (A) The scattered dot plot of the abundance of bead-bound exosomes from NSCLC, OVCA and healthy plasma obtained by TEM (n=25). A panel of surface markers (EpCAM, α-IGF-1R, CA125, CD9, CD81 and CD63) were used for exosome isolation. Dash line indicates the highest exosome counts observed for healthy controls. (B) NTA analysis of size distribution and abundance of vesicles purified from NSCLC and healthy controls by ultracentrifugation. The error bars are the standard deviations. Dashed lines are Log-normal fitting (R²>0.98). (C) Bradford assay of total protein in ultracentrifugation-purified exosomes from NSCLC patients (stage II) and healthy subjects (p=0.0007). (D) Representative IFH images of the matched tumor tissue from NSCLC patient #1 in (A) showing high expression of the biomarkers except CD63

FIG. 4. Integrated microfluidic exosome analysis. (A) Schematic of transmembrane IGF-1R in exosomes. We target extravesicular IGF-1R a unit and phosphorylated β domain inside the vesicle to demonstrate surface phenotyping and intravesicular protein analysis of exosomes. (B) Chemical lysis of exosomes by Triton X-100 surfactant observed by TEM. The scale bar is 100 nm. (C) Bright field images of injection (top) and mixing (bottom) of the protein capture beads in the serpentine channel. Scale bar is 200 μm. (D) Plot of the minimum flow distance required for uniform mixing as a function of flow rate ranging from 0.5 to 6 μL/min. Inset: fluorescence images taken at various distances along the channel for mixing a stream of 0.1 μM FITC-BSA solution with the bead suspension co-flowing at the same flow rate. (E) The effect of incubation time on chemifluorescence detection using alkaline phosphatase and the substrate DiFMU. (F) Calibration of on-chip capture and detection of IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R.

FIG. 5. Quantitative detection of total IGF-1R in circulating exosomes directly from clinical plasma samples. (A) The results of the integrated microfluidic analysis presented in the bar (left) and scattered dot (right) plots show significant overexpression of IGF-1R in EpCAM+ exosomes of NSCLC patients in relation to healthy controls (p=0.0001, CV=11.2%). (B) Parallel ELISA analysis confirmed the overexpression of IGF-1R in total exosomes purified from the same subjects by ultracentrifugation (p=0.0097, CV=56.4%). The error bars are standard deviations (n=3) in all cases.

FIG. 6. TEM representations of sample preparation steps. The sample preparation approaches significantly affect the exosome morphology and integrity. Representative images were analyzed by transmission electron microscope. (A) The exosomes immune-captured by micro-sized magnetic beads were prepared by two-step embedding protocols prior imaging. The fully intact and regular round shape was observed as the typical appearance of exosomes. (B) Membrane collapse was observed from exosomes prepared without embedding prior imaging. The irregular shape and cup shape were observed due to collapse during sample drying. (C) Collapsed exosomes and membrane fragments were often observed when immunomagnetically capturing the plasma-derived vesicles pre-isolated by differential ultracentrifugation. It may be attributed to the high shear force and mechanical damage that occur during ultracentrifugation. The scale bar is 100 nm.

FIG. 7. Graphical depiction and SEM representations beads. The beads suspended in a buffer solution were infused into the chamber and retained by the magnet placed underneath the center of the chamber, forming a field-induced aggregate due to the dipolar interactions between the beads. The size of immobilized micro-bead aggregates grows in the chamber near a magnet underneath with the increase of infused sample volume. The bright field images of aggregates in the magnetic capture chamber were acquired and analyzed using ImageJ to calculate the aggregate size relative to the chamber size.

FIG. 8. Graphs showing size distributions of exosomes isolated from NSCLC plasma by the microfluidic immunomagnetic capture targeting exosomal surface proteins (A) CD9, (B) α-IGF-1R, and (C) CD81, respectively. 130 captured vesicles were measured for each marker. Insets: representative TEM images of exosomes from each subpopulation. Scale bar is 100 nm. The dotted red lines are Log-normal fitted plots (R²>0.98). It was found that the percentages of the vesicles smaller than 150 nm are ˜97%, 80%, and 82% for CD9+, α-IGF-1R+, and CD81+ subpopulations, respectively

FIG. 9. Graphs showing size distribution of circulating exosomes from NSCLC and control subjects tested in FIG. 5 (main text) using ultracentrifugation purification and NTA (NanoSight). There is no distinct size profiles between healthy and NSCLC exosomes isolated by ultracentrifugation (fitted using log-normal distribution, R²>0.98).

FIG. 10. Graph showing total circulating exosomes in the plasma of healthy donors (blue) and NSCLC subjects (red) in FIG. S4 measured by NTA (NanoSight). The results are presented as the total number of particles per milliliter of plasma. Error bars represent the standard deviations of five measurements. NSCLC patient plasma samples contain significantly higher concentration of exosomes than that of the healthy controls (p=0.0001).

FIG. 11. Western blot analysis of ultracentrifugation-purified exosomes. (A) Differential expression of CD81 and CD9 and low expression of CD63 in exosomes from NSCLC cases of various stages (from left to right, I, VI and II) versus healthy controls. Exosomes purified from an ovarian cancer cell line C30 was included as the positive control for CD63 expression. (B) Western blot analysis of more Stage II NSCLC patients shows consistently low expression of exosomal CD63, which further confirms the observation in the main text (FIG. 3). NSCLC plasma exosomes showed higher expression of total IGF-1R than in the healthy controls, which verifies the on-chip results obtained by using the same samples (FIG. 5).

FIG. 12. Three-color IFH images of tumor tissue from NSCLC patient #2 in FIG. 3 in the main text, showing high expression of EpCAM, α-IGF-1R, CD9, CD81 but low expression of CD63. The tumor tissues were biopsied from lower lobe of lung tumor from the matched patient. Images were collected and merged in three-color using Metamorph. The IFH image size is ˜12×12 mm.

FIG. 13. Photograph of experiment testing cross-reactivity test of IGF-1R antibodies to IR protein using microplate ELISA. No cross-reactivity was observed between total IGF-1R antibodies and IR. In comparison, cross-reactivity of anti-p-IGF-1R with IR was detected. The antibodies against total IGF-1R (#1-4) and p-IGF-1R (#5-8) were obtained from different vendors, as listed in Table 1.

FIG. 14. Graph showing calibration of quantitative detection of total IGF-1R and phospho-IGF-1R using the standard 96-well microplate ELISA kit

FIG. 15. Graph showing quantitative detection of exosomal IGF-1R as a function of total exosome concentration in plasma. 10-fold dilutions of a NSCLC plasma sample (patient #11) were assayed to obtain the calibration curve (solid triangles). The measurements of the subjects in the main text FIG. 5 were superimposed in the plot (inset). Error bars are standard deviations (n=5 for x axis and n=3 for y axis).

FIG. 16. Graphs showing quantitative analysis of intravesicular p-IGF-1R in circulating exosomes using the same clinical samples as in FIG. 5. (A) Bar (left) and scattered dot (right) plots of the microfluidic results shows no significant difference of the p-IGF-1R level in the EpCAM+ exosomes between NSCLC and healthy subjects (p=0.46). (B) No correlation between the p-IGF-1R level and the disease state was verified by ELISA analysis (p=0.31). The error bars are standard deviations (n=3) in all cases.

FIG. 17. Screen capture of movie showing device architecture and workflow of microfluidic immunomagnetic beads manipulation for exosome profiling. The microscope stage was moved to observe in the order of injection channel, the first-stage magnetic capture chamber, serpentine mixing microchannel, and the second magnetic capture chamber. The two cascading magnetic-bead capture chambers are of 4-mm diameter and are capable of capturing up to 10⁹ 2.8 μm microbeads each. The length of the serpentine channel is 25 cm.

FIG. 18. (a) Workflow of the ExoSearch chip for continuous mixing, isolation and in-situ, multiplexed detection of circulating exosomes. (b)-(c) Bright-field microscope images of immunomagnetic beads manipulated in microfluidic channel for mixing and isolation of exosomes. (d) Exosome-bound immunomagnetic beads aggregated in a microchamber with on/off switchable magnet for continuous collection and release of exosomes. (e) TEM image of exosome-bound immunomagnetic bead in a cross-sectional view.

FIG. 19. Microfluidic continuous-flow mixing for efficient exosome isolation. (a) Two-stream particle mixing in the microchannel. Left: Fluorescence CCD images of mixing process for a stream of Texas Red labeled nanoparticles (50 nm) co-flowed with a bead solution. Middle: Immuno-magnetic beads (2.8 μm) tracked under bright field for mixing with human blood plasma. Right: Mixing of fluorescently labeled exosomes with antibody beads. Exosomes were purified from ovarian cancer patient plasma by ultracentrifugation. Scale bars: 300 μm. (b) Plots of minimum travel length required for uniform mixing over a flow rate range. Grey dashed line indicates mixing channel length in the ExoSearch chip. (c) Exosome capture efficiency as a function of mixing flow rate measured using purified, fluorescently labeled exosomes and capture beads.

FIG. 20. Microfluidic ExoSearch chip for specific isolation of ovarian cancer plasma derived exosomes. (a) TEM images of on-chip immunomagnetically isolated exosomes from ovarian cancer plasma, compared to healthy control. Scale bar is 100 nm. IgG-conjugated immunomagnetic beads were negative control beads. (b) Exosome counts analyzed from surfaces of variable capture beads (EpCAM+, CA-125+, CD9+, CD81+, CD63+) using TEM particle analysis (n=25, CV=2.8%-10%). Single bead diameter was 2.8 mm and sliced bead layer was 80-nm thick. (c) Size distribution of on-chip isolated exosomes (CD9+) using TEM particle analysis, compared to standard NTA analysis of ultracentrifugation-purified exosomes. Dashed lines were log-normal fit (R²>0.98).

FIG. 21. (a) CCD images of bead aggregates in ExoSearch chip captured with fluorescence-labeled plasma exosomes in serial dilutions (from left to right: 5×10⁵, 1×10⁶, 5×10⁶, 1×10⁷ particles/mL). Scale bar was 100 mm. (b) Calibration curves for quantitative detection of intact exosomes (R²>0.98, CV=˜5%). Exosomes were purified from one healthy control plasma and one ovarian cancer patient plasma using ultracentrifugation. Concentrations were measured by NTA. (c) CCD images of multiplexed three-color fluorescence detection of tumor markers (CA-125, EpCAM, CD24) from captured exosome subpopulation (CD9+). Scale bar was 50 mm, indicating bead aggregate size. (d) Average expression levels of three ovarian tumor markers measured by ExoSearch chip from 20 human subjects (n_(OvCa)=15, n_(healthy)=5). Error bars indicate standard deviations.

FIG. 22. (a) Scattering plots of expression levels of three tumor markers (CA-125, p<10⁻⁴; EpCAM, p=0.0009; CD24, p=0.003) from blood plasma derived exosomes (n_(OvCa)=15, n_(healthy)=5), compared to standard Bradford assay of total proteins (p=0.0013) in ultracentrifugation-purified exosomes from matched human subjects. Black lines indicate average expression levels of each group. Ovarian cancer patients were represented by red dots, and healthy controls were represented by blue dots. (b) ROC analysis of ExoSearch chip assay for in-situ, multiplexed detection of three ovarian tumor exosomal markers (CA-125 a.u.c.=1.0, p=0.001; EpCAM a.u.c.=1.0, p=0.001; CD24 a.u.c.=0.91, p=0.008). Confidence interval (CI) is 95%. (c) ROC analysis of standard benchtop measurements (Bradford assay of total exosome protein, and NTA of exosome concentration) of blood plasma exosomes from matched patients in FIG. 22 b.

FIG. 23. An embodiment of a microfluidic chip in accordance with the present disclosure. (a) A diagram of the microfluidic chip. (b) A picture of the microfluidic chip of FIG. 23(a) in a lab setting. (c) A TEM image of exosomes captured on immunomagnetic bead surface and isolated from the microfluidic chip of FIG. 23(a).

FIG. 24. The sequential snapshots showing the release process of bead aggreagates after switching off the magnetic field during continuous flow in ExoSearch chip.

FIG. 25. CCD captured microscopic images of beads aggregates under negative and positive control experimental conditions. Image size is 200 μm×200 μm.

FIG. 26. Western blotting analysis of expression levels of exosomal surface marker CD9, CA-125, and EpCAM. The exosome samples were prepared from ovarian cancer patients and healthy controls using standard ultracentrifugation.

FIG. 27. The plasma exosome particle concentrations from 20 human subjects measured by NTA (n_(OvCa)=15, n_(healthy)=5). Slightly higher average amount of plasma exosomes (1.5 fold) was observed from ovarian cancer patients, compared to healthy controls (p=0.25). The difference was not significant.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DISCLOSURE

The present disclosure relates to a microfluidic device and methods of using it. Features and various embodiments of components of the microfluidic device of this disclosure will be apparent from the description and figures presented herein. In general, the device is used for non-invasive procedures which involve testing samples for use in monitoring the treatment of, and/or diagnosing and/or aiding in the diagnosis, of a disorder or condition that is positively correlated with the presence of one or more immunologically detectable markers that are contained within membranous structures in a biological sample.

In general, the present disclosure includes obtaining a sample and testing it as generally depicted in Table 1 presented below. In embodiments, any biological sample can be used, and can be tested directly, or can be subjected to a processing step before being tested. In embodiments, the sample is plasma obtained from a human subject. The plasma sample can be mixed with, for instance, a first antibody labeled magnetic beads reagent to obtain isolated magnetic beads with bound membranous structures, such as exosomes. The bound exosomes can be washed and subjected to a lysis buffer solution treatment to obtain a lysate. The lysate can be incubated with a second antibody labeled magnetic beads reagent to specifically capture released intravesicular proteins such that protein capture beads are provided. The protein capture beads can be exposed to detection antibodies which comprise any suitable detectable label, such as a label that can produce detectable chemifluorescence. Thus, the disclosure includes use of a microfluidic device as described further below to detect and/or quantify a complex of detectably labeled antibodies and a target protein that is present in a sample obtained and/or derived from a human subject. In embodiments, the complex is a component similar to the complex formed during a sandwich ELISA assay.

In certain embodiments, the disclosure relates to an integrated microfluidic exosome profiling platform which streamlines and expedites exosome isolation and enrichment, lysis, and targeted protein marker probing in one continuous assay. In embodiments, a cascading microfluidic circuit with at least two immunomagnetic chambers connected by channel networks are provided, allowing the specific identification of intra-vesicular markers to be correlated with its subpopulation (i.e., exosome surface markers). In one embodiment, this platform can achieve quantitative exosomal biomarker profiling directly from human plasma in a total assay time of up to not more than 100 minutes, with reduced sample consumption (30 μL), enhanced sensitivity (LOD of femtogram) and specificity, and cost-effectiveness. In embodiments, the sample size is between 1 and 30 μL, including all integers and ranges of integers there between.

This disclosure includes as an illustrative embodiment analysis of exosomes, which generally illustrates the device and sample testing, but the embodiments described in this disclosure can be used and/or adapted for use with any membranous structures that contain immunologically detectable markers. In various embodiments the membranous structures are generally spherical lipid containing bodies. The spherical membranous structure can comprise lipid bilayers. The method is particularly suited for analyzing those membranous structures that are shed or otherwise secreted from cells. Thus, the membranous structures can be derived from any membrane containing biological material, which includes but is not necessarily limited to internal cellular membranes, vesicles, such as secretory vesicles, organelles, enveloped structures, plasma membranes and the like. In certain embodiments, the membranous structure is selected from vesicles, exosomes, microvesicles, micro-particles, intraluminal vesicles, endosomal derived vesicles, multivesicular bodies, and combinations thereof. In particular embodiments, the disclosure relates to analysis of exosomes, including but not necessarily limited to plasma-derived circulating exosomes. In certain approaches, exosomes are characterized by exosome surface markers, such as CD9, CD81, and CD63, and combinations thereof. In certain approaches, the exosomes are characterized according to the features described in FIG. 4 presented herein.

In embodiments, the marker that is analysed using a microfluidic device as further described herein is a protein marker. In embodiments, the protein marker is a cancer marker. In an illustrative embodiment which demonstrates feasibility of applying the present disclosure to a wide range of conditions which are positively correlated with the presence of a protein marker, the disclosure includes a demonstration using a protein marker that is characteristic of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC). In embodiments, the protein marker is type 1 insulin growth factor receptor (IGF-1R). In embodiments, a microfluidic device as described herein is used to determine the expression levels of total and phosphorylated IGF-1R in NSCLC plasma-derived circulating exosomes. Thus, the disclosure includes a method of diagnosing, or aiding in the diagnosis of, or for monitoring the treatment of an individual diagnosed with, suspected of having, or at risk for developing a condition that is positively correlated with a particular protein marker, such as IGF-1R in connection with NSCLC. The method generally comprises obtaining a biological sample comprising membranous structures, such as exosomes, and analyzing the biological sample using a microfluidic device as described herein for IGF-1R, or any other marker, and/or to determine the expression levels of total and phosphorylated IGF-1R, or any other marker, in NSCLC plasma-derived circulating exosomes, or an exosome-containing sample from an individual who has, or is suspected of having, or has been diagnosed with any other disorder that is correlated with the presence of a marker that is physically associated with the exosomes. In embodiments, a determination of the expression levels of total and phosphorylated IGF-1R in NSCLC plasma-derived circulating exosomes comprises a diagnosis of NSCLC, and/or aids in a physician's diagnosis of NSCLC, and/or is used in staging NSCLC, and/or is used to generate a prognosis and/or treatment protocol for NSCLC, and/or is used multiple times over a period of treatment to assess the efficacy of a treatment. Those skilled in the art will recognize that, instead of IGF-1R, any other immunologically detectable markers can be assayed using a device of the disclosure.

One embodiment of a microfluidic chip of the present disclosure has two capture chambers. A first capture chamber is configured for immunomagnetic isolation and is connected to a sample inlet and a buffer inlet. In one example, the first capture chamber is configured to isolate magnetic microbeads with bound exosomes from a fluid sample. A second capture chamber is configured for protein analysis. The two capture chambers are connected by a first microchannel, a serpentine microchannel, and a second microchannel. The first microchannel and second microchannels may be parts of the serpentine microchannel (such as at the ends of the serpentine microchannel) or may be separate microchannels. The first microchannel connects the first capture chamber to the serpentine microchannel. The second microchannel connects the serpentine microchannel to the second capture chamber. At least one connector channel may be connected to a bead inlet and also to the first microchannel upstream of the serpentine microchannel and downstream of the first capture chamber. A second connector channel with similar connections also may be used. A reagent inlet is connected to the second microchannel upstream of the second capture chamber and downstream of the serpentine microchannel. An outlet may be connected downstream of the second capture chamber.

The first capture chamber and the second capture chamber can be 1-10 mm in diameter, including all integers and ranges of integers there between. In one embodiment, the first and second chambers are approximately 4 mm in diameter and may be configured to each capture a plurality of beads. In embodiments, the first and second capture chambers are configured to capture up to approximately 10⁹ microbeads. In embodiments, the microbeads have a diameter that is less than 10 μm, and is between 0.1 and 10 μm, including all integers there between to the first decimal place, and all ranges of such integers and decimal places. In a non-limiting example, the microbeads have a diameter of 2.8 μm. The connector channel has dimensions configured to let magnetic microbeads pass through. The serpentine microchannel may have a surface that is hydrophilic.

A magnet can be positioned opposite a surface of the microfluidic chip. This microfluidic chip is fabricated using any suitable solid support as a substrate, one non-limiting example of which is a glass substrate. The glass substrate can be modified, such as being fully or partially coated with any suitable polymeric organosilicon compounds, commonly referred to in the art as silicones. In one embodiment, the organosilicon compound comprises a layer of poly(dimethylsiloxane).

A syringe pump, such as a syringe pump with picoliter resolution, can be connected to one of the sample inlet, the buffer inlet, the bead inlet, or the reagent inlet. Alternatively, a four-syringe pump may be connected to the sample inlet, the buffer inlet, the bead inlet, and the reagent inlet.

Another embodiment of a microfluidic chip, which is referred to from time to time as the “ExoSearch chip,” provides enriched preparation of blood plasma exosomes for in-situ, multiplexed detection using immunomagnetic beads. The microfluidic chip offers robust, continuous-flow design for quantitative isolation and release of blood plasma exosomes in a wide range of preparation volumes. For example, the volumes may be from 10 μL to 10 mL, including all integers and integer ranges there between. The streamlined isolation and enrichment of exosomes with multiplexed tumor marker detection is established. The microfluidic chip can be used for blood-based diagnosis of ovarian cancer by multiplexed measurement of three exosomal tumor markers (CA-125, EpCAM, CD24) using a training set of ovarian cancer patient plasma, which showed diagnostic power (a.u.c.=1.0, p=0.001) and was comparable with standard Bradford assay.

Another embodiment of the present invention includes microfluidic-based exosome lysis, inside protein release and capture, and chemiluminescence detection of released proteins. The microfluidic chip in embodiments of the present disclosure (e.g., the “ExoSearch chip”) can provide on-chip isolation of intact exosomes and can streamlined with in-situ, multiplexed detection of multi-marker on intact exosome surface. The ExoSearch chip can combines on-chip continuous-flow mixing and immunomagnetic isolation with an in-situ, multiplexed exosomal surface marker detection. Continuous-flow on-chip mixing and operation can be provided, which affords dynamic scalability in processing sample volumes from microliter for on-chip analysis to milliliter preparation for variable downstream measurements. For example, an exosome sample processing capacity is from 10 μL to 10 mL, including all ranges and values to the 1 μL there between. The microfluidic chip can enable multiplexed quantification of marker combinations (e.g., multiple exosomal markers) in one sample with improved speed (e.g., approximately 40 mins). Three-color fluorescence detection of a panel of tumor markers in one enriched exosome sample can be performed simultaneously. Due to the microfluidic chip's simplicity, cost-effectiveness, and robustness, the microfluidic chip can be adaptable into a viable technology in point-of-care and clinical settings.

In another aspect the present disclosure comprises kits. The kits can be provided with one of the microfluidic devices described herein, and can further comprise one or more sealed or sealable containers in which are held reagents for obtaining, processing, and using a biological sample, and/or reagents used to isolate, concentrate and/or purify exosomes. In embodiments the reagents comprise one or more buffers, such as buffers for mixing with a biological sample and/or separated exosomes. The kits can also comprise beads, such as glass beads or beads made from other material, such as polymers, i.e., polystyrene, silica, or metals, such as nanometric-sized iron oxide particles, which may be encapsulated or otherwise held together with polymers. In embodiments the beads are magnetized, and may exhibit superparamagnetism in the presence of an externally applied magnetic field. The beads may be from 1-3 μm in diameter, but other diameters may be possible. The beads may be modified so that they are suitable for attaching any desired capture agent. Capture agents include but are not necessarily limited to antibodies and antigen binding fragments thereof. In embodiments, the beads are functionalized so that they can be covalently or non-covalently associated with a capture agent. In embodiments, the beads as provided with the kit comprise, for example, streptavidin covalently coupled to the surface of the beads, and as such are configured to form complexes with a biotinylated component, such as a biotinylated antibody or antigen binding fragment thereof. In an embodiment, the beads are coated with a monolayer of streptavidin. In embodiments the beads comprise functionalized groups on their surfaces, or chemical groups that are capable of being functionalized. In one embodiment the beads comprise polyvinyl alcohol on their surface. In embodiments, the beads can be hydrophilic and/or negatively charged. In embodiments, the kits comprise reagents for coupling a capture agent, such as an antibody or antigen binding fragment thereof, to the beads. In embodiments, the beads are configured such that they have an antibody capacity of ˜10 μg antibody per 1 mg of beads. In embodiments, the beads can be provided pre-loaded with one or more capture agents pre-loaded onto their surfaces so that they can be used with the microfluidic devices to capture exosomes or any other membranous structure that comprises one or more biomarkers for which the one or more capture agents are specific. In one embodiment, a first set of capture beads is included and may adapted to capture exosomes or an exosome sub-population, regardless of their biomarker content. Thus, the beads can be covalently modified to comprise an exosome specific binding partner, such as an exosome specific antibody. In embodiments, the beads comprise antibodies that bind with specificity to the exosome markers CD9, or CD81, or CD63, or Epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM), or combinations thereof. Combinations of these markers present on one, or distinct combinations of beads are also encompassed by this disclosure. In embodiments, a capture agent for CD63 is used in addition with at least one other exosome capture agent. In an alternative embodiment, no capture agent directed to CD63 is used. Variable capture agents can be used in this embodiments corresponding to measurement configuration.

A second set of capture beads can also be provided, and can be adapted for capturing and/or detecting one or more biomarkers, such as a protein biomarker, including but not limited to a protein known to be associated with a particular disorder, such as one or more types of cancer. Thus, in various embodiments, the kits comprise exosome capture beads, and may further comprise beads for biomarker capture, wherein the biomarker is distinct from the exosome marker.

The following examples are presented to illustrate the present disclosure. They are not intended to be limiting in any manner.

EXAMPLE 1

This and the following Examples relate to integrated microfluidic microvesicle profiling using an illustrative device which contains a cascading microchannel circuit to integrate and streamline the multi-step profiling of exosomes directly from human plasma, including exosome isolation and enrichment (1^(st) stage capture), exosome lysis, fluidic mixing and immunomagnetic capture of intravesicular targets (2^(nd) stage capture), and protein assays (FIG. 1). A representative device architecture is detailed in FIG. 1A. The two cascading magnetic-bead capture chambers (first capture chamber 10 and second capture chamber 11) are of 4-mm diameter and are capable of capturing up to 10⁹ 2.8 μm microbeads each. A plasma sample pre-mixed with antibody labeled magnetic beads is introduced through sample inlet 1 into the first capture chamber 10 where the magnetic beads with bound exosomes are isolated from the sample and washed by PBS washing buffer (FIG. 1B). The lysis buffer is introduced through the buffer inlet 2 and incubated with captured exosomes in the first capture chamber 10 by stopping the flow. The lysate then flows into a first microchannel 12, a serpentine microchannel 13, and a second microchannel 14 along with antibody labeled magnetic beads introduced from a bead inlet 3 into two connector channels 15, 16 to specifically capture released intravesicular proteins (FIG. 1B (2)). The protein capture beads are magnetically retained in the second capture chamber 11 in which detection antibodies (bead inlet 3) and chemifluorescence reagents (reagent inlet 4) can be introduced to perform sandwich immuno-detection of captured intravesicular protein markers (FIG. 1 B (3)). The complete analysis can be finished with as low as 30 μL plasma samples in ˜2 hrs, i.e., 0.5 hrs for sample incubation with magnetic beads and ˜1.5 hrs for the on-chip assay. A sample can flow from the second capture chamber 11 to an outlet 17 for collection. The multiple fluidic introductions are precisely controlled using programmable syringe pumps with picoliter resolution, though other types of pumps also may be used.

A representative transmission electron microscopy (TEM) image of on-chip immunomagnetically isolated plasma exosomes is shown in FIG. 1C, in comparison to ultracentrifugation-purified plasma microvesicles (FIG. 1D and E). Immunomagnetic isolation revealed a population of vesicles in a typical round, homogenous morphology with a major size distribution of 40-150 nm, consistent with reported exosome morphology. The cup-shaped morphology is often considered erroneously as a typical appearance of microvesicles resulted from membrane collapse during sample drying, without embedding and sectioning for TEM imaging. Relatively large aggregates and other membranous particles (see arrows in FIG. 1D & E) in a heterogeneous population of vesicles purified by ultracentrifugation could be observed in some samples. Although ultracentrifugation is the most commonly used technique to isolate exosomes, the limitation in differentiating the subpopulation of extracellular vesicles highlights the need for the present, more selective isolation approach.

In more detail as it relates to FIG. 1, our microfluidic technology uses the magnetic bead-based strategy to integrate and streamline the multi-step analysis of exosomes directly from human plasma (FIG. 1A). Compared to the surface-based exosome microchips, the immunomagnetic method allows for enrichment of captured exosomes and convenient sample preparation for TEM characterization, in addition to higher capture efficiency and analysis sensitivity due to larger surface area. As described above, the PDMS chip of this disclosure uses a cascading microchannel circuit to sequentially conduct exosome isolation and enrichment (1st stage capture), chemical lysis, immunoprecipitation of intravesicular targets (2nd stage capture), and chemifluorescence-assisted sandwich immunoassay (FIG. 1A and 6 Table 2). Briefly, to create portions of FIG. 1, plasma sample pre-mixed with antibody labelled magnetic beads was introduced through the inlet #1 into the first chamber where the magnetic beads were retained and washed by PBS buffer (FIG. 1B) (1), FIG. 18). A lysis buffer was then introduced through the inlet #2 to fill the chamber and then the flow was stopped to incubate with the captured exosomes. The lysate was flowed into a serpentine channel along with the antibody labelled magnetic beads injected from two side channels to capture intravesicular proteins released (FIG. 1B (2)). The protein capture beads were magnetically retained in the 2nd chamber where detection antibodies and chemifluorescence reagents were sequentially introduced to perform sandwich immuno-detection of protein markers of interest (FIG. 1B (3)). The buffers for binding and washing have been optimized to minimize bead aggregation and non-specific adsorption while maintaining the integrity of captured exosomes (see FIG. 6). The on-chip assay can be completed in less than 1.5 hrs and uses as low as 30 μL plasma sample. FIG. 1C & D show representative TEM images of on-chip isolated exosomes from NSCLC and ovarian cancer (OVCA), respectively. We observed a typical round, homogenous morphology of exosomes which were carefully prepared by embedding and sectioning for TEM imaging. The cup shape of exosomes was often observed by electron microscopy, which is likely resulted from drying-caused collapse of vesicles. A major size distribution of 40-150 nm was determined, which is consistent with the reported size range. For comparison, we purified the exosomes by the gold standard method, ultracentrifugation, and often observed a heterogeneous population of vesicles containing relatively large aggregates and other membranous particles (FIG. 1E & F). It is notable that at the early stage of technical development, we also explored the immunocapture of ultra-centrifugation-purified exosomes for parallel evaluation of the one-step microfluidic isolation. However, the capture efficiency was found considerably low and variable, which may be attributed to the fact that the recovery rate of ultra-centrifugation is low (5-25%) and further reduced by the additional immunocapture steps. In addition, we observed much more irregular vesicles bound to the beads by TEM, which appear to be collapsed or damaged (FIG. 6).

EXAMPLE 2

This Example provides a description of on-chip immunomagnetic isolation of circulating exosomes. We first investigated magnetic capture of beads as it dictates the overall performance of exosome isolation and analysis. The beads suspended in a buffer solution were retained by a magnet placed underneath the capture chamber (FIG. 2A, inset), forming an aggregate (FIG. 8) induced by the dipolar interactions between the beads. It was reported that the amount of magnetically captured beads in a microchannel can be represented by the size of the bead aggregate, which increases linearly with time at a constant flow rate. We adopted this approach to conveniently assess the bead capture a function of flow conditions (FIG. 2A). It was found that the aggregate size was linearly dependent on the total sample infusion volume regardless of the flow rates applied to reach certain infusion volumes (1-10 μL/min, FIG. 2A). The independence on flow rate indicates a high bead capture efficiency and capacity of our system, which ensures quantitative measurement of exosomes over a wide range of flow conditions and sample volume. We chose low flow rates for affinity capture of exosomes and protein targets released by chemical lysis (2 μL/min and 1 μL/min, respectively), at which the bead recovery efficiency was determined to be >99.9% by counting the residual beads in the eluent.

To verify the capture specificity and generalizability of our method, we compared the on-chip purification of exosomes from NSCLC, OVCA, and healthy plasma using beads labeled with the monoclonal antibody specific for epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM), IGF-1R a unit (α-IGF-1R) or CA125. TEM examination shows that the antibody beads were densely coated with vesicles from the patient sample, while significantly less vesicles from healthy plasma and almost no vesicles for the negative control beads without specific antibodies. These results confirm the specific binding of exosomes and effective washing to minimize non-specific binding. Moreover, we examined by TEM numerous exosomes isolated by targeting various surface markers. The majority of those exosomes remained intact, in contrast to much more damaged vesicles observed for immunocapture of vesicles pre-purified by ultracentrifugation (FIG. 9). This indicates the advantage of the direct one-step microfluidic immunoisolation to preserve vesicle integrity over the conventional ultracentrifugation-based protocols.

The on-chip capture performance was further characterized by the size distribution of individual exosome subpopulations isolated by targeting both tumor-associated markers (EpCAM, α-IGF-1R, and CA125) and common exosomal markers (CD9, CD81, and CD63). Size is the most acceptable criterion for exosome identification and differentiation from other extracellular vesicle types. Current consensus is that exosomes originated from multivesicular endosome fusion are typically smaller than 150 nm while the majority of microvesicles derived from plasma membrane are relatively larger (150-2000 nm). Compared to nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA) by NanoSight which requires ˜1 mL of concentrated vesicles (˜10⁹ mL⁻¹) for accurate size determination, TEM provides a robust means for sizing and counting of exosomes in small-volumes collected from microfluidic isolation without significant dilution (˜30 μL). Most immunocaptured exosomes were found smaller than 150 nm with notably smaller size range (e.g., 97% of EpCAM+ and CA125+ vesicles <150 nm) than that of ultracentrifugation (72.1%) (FIG. 2C and FIG. 8). Current “gold standard” approaches based on ultracentrifugation pull down a mixed population of various extracellular vesicle types with a wide size distribution. Indeed, our NTA analysis of ultracentrifugation-purified vesicles yielded broader size variation and no distinct profiles between healthy and NSCLC cases (FIG. 2C and FIG. 9). These findings indicate the microfluidic immunocapture method of this disclosure provides a more specific approach to purifying exosomes than ultracentrifugation.

EXAMPLE 3

This Example provides a description of profiling of exosome subpopulations by protein phenotype. Surface protein composition of exosomes plays an important role in exosome-mediated effects and may provide tumor fingerprints. To demonstrate the ability to detect exosomal expression patterns associated with cancer, we conducted relative quantification of five exosome subpopulations defined by individual surface markers using TEM. FIG. 3A exemplifies the results for two of the NSCLC samples that we have tested. Distinct subpopulation landscapes were observed, as compared to the healthy controls with a 3- to 5-fold increase in abundance for the surface markers except CD63. We further demonstrated the adaptability of our method for other cancers by testing on OVCA with the tumor markers (EpCAM and CA125) and exosomal markers (CD9, CD81, and CD63). The OVCA samples also provide a positive control for the NSCLC studies, as CD63 was found to be highly expressed in OVCA exosomes. High CD63 expression was observed, which validates our method and supports the observation of low CD63 expression in NSCLC cases. The abilities to discriminate disease from healthy subjects and to detect differential expression of markers (e.g., CD63) in cancers indicate the high immunocapture specificity of the present microfluidic method. To verify the microfluidic results, we performed parallel analyses of the NSCLC samples using standard ultracentrifugation and analytical methods. Exosome abundance of the patient plasma measured by NTA showed a ˜4-fold increase in average than that of the healthy controls (p=0.0001, FIG. 3B and FIG. 10, in line with the total protein levels determined by the Bradford assay (3.9-fold increase in average, p=0.0007, FIG. 3C). Western blotting analysis showed increased exosomal expression of CD9, CD81, and IGF-1R markers, but indiscernible or low CD63 levels in NSCLC patients of various stages (FIG. 11). In this case, the exosomes collected from a cell line (ovarian cancer C30) were included as a positive control for CD63 detection. Collectively, these standard studies verify the microfluidic analysis of surface phenotypes of circulating exosomes. Both microfluidic and the standard methods detected significant elevation of exosome abundance and exosomal markers in NSCLC and OVCA, inferring the potential clinical value of circulating exosomes for cancer research and diagnostics. The present microfluidic technology provides not only a general approach for one-step isolation of exosomes directly from plasma, but also the ability to purify molecularly defined subpopulations that are inaccessible to other physical methods such as ultracentrifugation, nanofiltration and size exclusion. Such capability would be beneficial for deconvoluting the complexity of extracellular vesicles to facilitate molecular classification and characterization of exosomes. The unique one-step isolation system also contrasts with the conventional bulk immunomagnetic methods in that it eliminates multiple, lengthy preparation steps of washing and manual buffer exchange which can cause damage and loss of exosomes. To determine if the plasma-derived exosomes in NSCLC show similar protein profiles to the tumor origin, we conducted the three-color immunofluorescence histological (IFH) study of patient-matched lung tumor tissues. High expression of EpCAM, α-IGF-1R, CD9 and CD81 and low expression of CD63 were detected in the tumor tissues (FIG. 3D and FIG. 12), in agreement with the subpopulation profiles of plasma exosomes obtained by the microfluidic technology and the standard analyses (FIG. 3 and FIG. 11). The matched molecular profiles between circulating exosomes and tumor tissues support the potential use of exosoms for non-invasive molecular profiling of solid tumor tissue. Our studies also provide experiment evidences to support recently arising questioning on the use of CD63 as a general surface marker for exosome isolation. Decreased CD63 expression has been found in relation to tumour growth and invasiveness in lung and other cancers.

EXAMPLE 4

This Example provides a description of integrated exosome analysis for non-invasive detection of cancer biomarkers. Recent results on profiling of microRNAs contained inside circulating exosomes have demonstrated the potential of exosomes as surrogate markers for tumor biopsy. There is increasing interest in proteomic characterization of exosomes. Our ultimate goal is to develop a microfluidic technology capable of measuring both surface and intravesicular proteins of circulating exosomes. In this proof-of-concept study, we demonstrated the integrated analysis of two targets in NSCLC: total IGF-1R and phosphorylated IGF-1R (p-IGF-1R). The IGF-1R pathway provides a potent proliferative signaling system implicated in tumorigenesis and metastasis. Phosphorylation of IGF-1R initiated by binding of ligands, such as IGF-1, is required for activation of the MAPK, PI3K, AKT and other signaling pathways involved in cell proliferation and survival. Thus there has been an intense interest in studies of IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R as diagnostic markers and therapeutic targets.—However, currently immunohistochemistry test of tumor tissues predominates in clinical assessment of IGF-1R expression, which is invasive and problematic for regular monitoring of disease progression and response to treatment. To our best knowledge, no studies of exosomal IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R have been reported. As illustrated in FIG. 4A, IGF-1R is a transmembrane protein composed of two surface a subunits and two intravesicular β subunits containing tyrosine kinase domain which can be phosphorylated. Thus the total IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R provide good model targets for demonstrating microfluidic surface phenotyping and intravesicular protein analysis of exosomes. To avoid the interference from free proteins in plasma, we used a monoclonal EpCAM antibody for exosome capture and two antibodies that specifically recognize α-IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R, respectively.

The unique cascading microfluidic immunocapture strategy described herein enables integration of exosome isolation with downstream processing and analysis, i.e., chemical lysis, flow mixing and protein capture, and chemifluorescence-based sandwich immunoassays. To chemically lyse the captured exosomes, a mild non-ionic detergent, Triton X-100, was used to lyse cells yet to retain the activity of proteins. The lysis conditions, including Triton X-100 concentrations and incubation times, were studied and 5 min incubation with 5% Triton X-100 was found to be sufficient to completely lyse exosomes (FIG. 4B). The exosome lysate was flushed into a serpentine microchannel to mix with magnetic beads conjugated with specific antibody to capture released protein targets. To enhance fluidic mixing, the suspension of protein capture beads was injected from two side channels to flank the lysate stream (FIG. 4C, top), which facilitates the mass transfer across the channel. Uniform bead distribution across the 200-μm channel can be achieved within a travel distance of ˜10 mm at 1 μL/min (FIG. 4C, bottom). Fluorescence imaging was also employed to exam the mixing behaviour, which reveals a linear response of the minimum distance for complete mixing to flow rate in the range of 0.5 to 6 μL/min (FIG. 4D). This result provides a guidance to optimize the chip design and flow rate. In our system with a 25-cm mixing channel and 4-mm microchamber, a flow rate of 1 μL/min was used to yield a long incubation time of ˜3.8 min which allows efficient solid-phase affinity capture of protein.

We then optimized the on-chip bead-based immunoassay and chemifluorescence readout using a matched pair of capture/detection antibodies, alkaline phosphatase (AP) conjugated secondary antibody, and the DiFMUP substrate. The incubation time is an important factor for the small-scale enzymatic chemifluorescence detection. It was found that the fluorescent signal saturates after 6 min incubation in the microchamber (FIG. 4E), allowing for fast on-chip protein detection. We then calibrated the on-chip human IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R assays by running protein standards through the entire process except the lysis step. As plotted in FIG. 4F, the microfluidic assay achieved quantitative detection of IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R over a dynamic range of 4 logs with a detection limit of 0.281 pg/mL and 0.383 pg/mL, respectively (S/N=3). Such sensitivity is at least 100-fold higher than the commercial ELISA kits (FIG. 14), which indicates efficient immunoprecipitation of exosomal proteins in our microfluidic system.

We implemented the integrated microfluidic analysis to examine membrane protein IGF-1R and intravesicular p-IGF-1R directly in the plasma of early-stage NSCLC patients (stage II). The microfluidic results were compared to parallel ELISA analysis of ultracentrifugation-purified vesicles from the same patients (2 mL plasma). To avoid the interference from plasma IGF-1R, we used an EpCAM antibody to capture tumor-derived exosome subpopulations in 30 μL patient plasma. A potential problem may arise from the cross-reactivity of the antibodies with insulin receptor (IR) which shares 80% homology with IGF-1R. To investigate this effect, we tested IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R antibodies from a number of vendors using a commercial IR ELISA kit (Table 1). No cross-reaction with IR was detected for all the IGF-1R antibodies (FIG. 13). FIG. 5A shows that the NSCLC patients overexpress circulating exosomes with an EpCAM+/IGF-1R+ phenotype and can be well discriminated from the control group (p<0.0001). The detected IGF-1R concentration was found to correlate linearly with the total abundance of plasma vesicles determined by NTA, while our method measured a fraction of the circulating vesicles (FIG. 15). In addition, the quantitative detection was achieved for vesicle concentrations much lower than the healthy levels. These results validate the method for sensitive and quantitative characterization of circulating exosomes in clinical samples. IGF-1R overexpression was also evident in the ELISA results presented in FIG. 5B (p<0.01), consistent with the previous observations reported for NSCLC cell lines and tumor tissues. It is notable that ELISA detects the total IGF-1R level in all vesicle types co-purified by ultracentrifugation, while our method enables characterization of molecularly defined subpopulations.

The ability to probe intravesicular contents of selected subpopulations is critical for comprehensive characterization of exosomes and elucidation of their biological and pathological implications. To this end, we measured the intravesicular level of phosphorylated IGF-1R using the same samples as above. Although considerable cross-talking was observed between p-IGF-1R antibodies and IR, (FIG. 13), our method is able to specifically detect p-IGF-1R without IR interference because exosomal p-IGF-1R is captured by the monoclonal anti-IGF-1R beads, followed by washing to remove other exosomal species. As seen in FIG. 16A, the p-IGF-1R profile showed no correlation with that of IGF-1R and the disease state, which was further confirmed by the ELISA analysis (FIG. 16B). This result confirms the specificity of the antibodies for detection of p-IGF-1R without discernable cross-reaction with IGF-1R.

It will be recognized from the foregoing that the present disclosure demonstrates microfluidic isolation and targeted proteomic analysis of exosomes directly from clinical plasma samples, all integrated in one rapid workflow with high sensitivity and specificity. Since many specific antibodies for cancer biomarkers are commercially available, the present method can be readily extended for multiplexed proteomic analysis of circulating exosomes in various cancer types. The plasma volume required to demonstrate the unique features of the present approach was only ˜1/100 of that for the conventional protocols, indicating highly efficient exosome immunocapture and sensitive protein analysis of our method. This advantage immediately addresses the challenges in exosomes, purification, which has been until now a key setback in clinical development of exosomal biomarkers.

EXAMPLE 5

This Example provides a description of the materials and methods used to produce the results described above.

Reagents, chemicals, and antibodies. The stock solution of 10% Triton X-100 was purchased from Roche Diagnostics for making exosome lysis buffer. The fluorogenic substrate DiFMUP (6,8-difluoro-4-methylumbelliferyl phosphate) was purchased from Invitrogen, stored in DMSO solution in dark in a −20 ° C. freezer, and freshly prepared before each use. The recombinant standard human IGF-1R and phosphorylated IGF-1R proteins were purchased from R&D system. The antibodies used in the study have been listed in Table 1. The crossreactivity of antibodies from different vendors against α-IGF-1R and phospho-IGF-1R has been tested using a ELISA kit (Insulin Receptor β-subunit KHR9111, Invitrogen) to ensure the antibody specificity to IGF-1R.

No. Target/human Vendor Catalog No Clone 1 IGF-1R-biotin Bioss bs-0227R-Biotin/poly rabbit 2 Total IGF-1R-biotin R & D DYC305-2/poly rabbit 3 IGF-1R β Cell signaling #3027/poly rabbit 4 IGF-1R R & D MAB391/mono mouse 33255 5 IGF-1R(pTyr1165/1166) Enogene E011088-1/poly rabbit 6 IGF-1R(pTyr1161) Acris AP01610PU-N/poly rabbit 7 IGF- Millipore ABE332/poly rabbit 1R(pTyr1161/1165/1166) 8 IGF-1R(pTyr1131) Cell signaling #3021/poly rabbit IGF-1R α, Biotin Thermal MA5-13799/mono 24-31 Scientific mouse EpCAM, Biotin abcam ab79079/mono mouse VU-1D9 CD9, Biotin abcam ab28094/mono mouse MEM-61 CD63, Biotin Ancell 215-030/mono mouse AHN16.1/46- 4-5 CD81, Biotin Ancell 302-030/mono mouse 1.3.3.22 CA125, Biotin MyBioSource MBS531893/mono X52 mouse CA125, Biotin Fitzgerald 61R-C112bBT/mono X52 mouse Anti-rabbit IgG-AP A&B T2191

Microfabrication. The microfluidic exosome profiling device was composed of a poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) layer sealed with a glass slide. The PDMS device was fabricated using the standard soft lithography. A master was made by patterning SU8 photoresist on a 4-inch silicon wafer and was silanized to facilitate removal of PDMS. Negative PDMS replicas were made by pouring a 10:1 mixture of PDMS base with the curing agent over the wafer, followed by curing at 60° C. overnight. After removing the replicas from the master, the fluidic interfacing holes were punched at desired location. The PDMS layer was bonded to a clean glass substrate to form the enclosed microchannels immediately after exposing to UV Ozone for 3 min. The deactivation of PDMS microfluidic channel was conducted using (3-aminopropyl) trimethoxy silane treatment. Briefly, the PDMS microfluidic channel was continuously flushed with a mixture of H2O/H2O2/HCl (volume ratio of 5:1:1) for 30 min to obtain the hydrophilic silanol-covered surface. After purging the microchannel with deionized water and dry Ar, the neat (3-aminopropyl) trimethoxy silane (Sigma-Aldrich) was pumped into the microchannel at room temperature for 10 min. The unreacted silane was flushed out using deionized water mixed with ethanol (1:1) to generate hydrophilic surface. The non-specific binding was further minimized by employing the blocking buffer (1% BSA containing 0.1% Tween 20) and washing buffer (1×PBS buffer, 0.01% Tween 20).

Microfluidic exosome analysis protocol. The detailed protocol for on-chip exosome assay is illustrated in Table 2. Reagent delivery was precisely controlled using a 4-syringe programmable pump system (HARVARD Pump11 Elite). Plasma samples (30-150 μL) pre-mixed with immunomagnetic microbeads were introduced through the inlet 1 into the first-stage magnetic capture chamber at a flow rate of 2 μL/min for the immunomagnetic isolation of exosomes (Step 1). A lysis buffer was then flowed into the first-stage magnetic chamber and stopped for incubation with the beads to completely lyse the exosomes (Step 2). The lysate in the first-stage magnetic capture chamber was subsequently flowed into the serpentine mixing microchannels for immunomagnetic capture of released exosomal protein markers (Step 3). Protein capture microbeads were then collected at the second-stage magnetic chamber for sandwich immunodetection using the diluted primary detection antibodies (1:100) (inlet 3, Step 4). The secondary antibody anti-rabbit IgG-AP (1:100 dilution) was introduced (inlet 3, Step 5), followed by the introduction of the fluorogenic substrate DiFMUP for quantitative and sensitive chemifluorescence detection (inlet 4, Step 6).

The washing buffer has been optimized to minimize bead aggregation and non-specific adsorption while maintaining the integrity of captured exosomes. Tween 20 is a commonly used non-ionic surfactant for immunoassays and has been reported as a buffer addictive at low concentrations (0.05%) for exosome processing and analysis1. We have tested 1×PBS buffer with Tween 20 at different concentrations (0, 0.01%, 0.1%, 1%) and observed that 0.01% tween 20 can effectively remove non-specific adsorption (FIG. 2) and prevent the formation of bead aggregation and protein/vesicle clumps which otherwise were often observed during magnetic capture without Tween 20 added. Through TEM examination, it was observed that the captured exosomes remain intact. The washing buffer (1×PBS, 0.01% Tween 20) was employed for 5 min between each step. To maximize the recovery of released exosomal proteins, a total volume of 30 μL buffer was continuously infused to wash the exosome-binding beads captured in the first chamber and then mixed with the protein-binding beads, which were finally collected in the second chamber for downstream protein assays (Table 1). The washing buffer has been optimized to minimize bead aggregation and non-specific adsorption while maintaining the integrity of captured exosomes. Tween 20 is a commonly used non-ionic surfactant for immunoassays and has been reported as a buffer addictive at low concentrations (0.05%) for exosome processing and analysis ¹ . We have tested 1×PBS buffer with Tween 20 at different concentrations (0, 0.01%, 0.1%, 1%) and observed that 0.01% tween 20 can effectively remove non-specific adsorption (FIG. 2) and prevent the formation of bead aggregation and protein/vesicle clumps which otherwise were often observed during magnetic capture without Tween 20 added. Through TEM examination, it was observed that the captured exosomes remain intact. The washing buffer (1×PBS, 0.01% Tween 20) was employed for 5 min between each step. To maximize the recovery of released exosomal proteins, a total volume of 30 μL buffer was continuously infused to wash the exosome-binding beads captured in the first chamber and then mixed with the protein-binding beads, which were finally collected in the second chamber for downstream protein assays (Table 1).

FIG. 17 shows a screen capture from a movie of the device architecture and workflow of microfluidic immunomagnetic beads manipulation for exosome profiling. The field of view was highlighted in the sequence images. The microscope stage was moved to observe in the order of injection channel, the first-stage magnetic capture chamber, serpentine mixing microchannel, and the second magnetic capture chamber. The two cascading magnetic-bead capture chambers are of 4-mm diameter and are capable of capturing up to 10⁹ 2.8 μm microbeads each. The length of the serpentine channel is 25 mm.

Immunomagnetic beads and antibody coupling. Streptavidin-coated magnetic microbeads (Dynal beads M-270, 2.8 μm in diameter) were purchased from Invitrogen. Antibodies against α-IGF-1R, EpCAM, CD9, CD81, and CD63 (Table 1) were coupled to the Dynal beads through biotin-streptavidin linkage per the instruction, generating typical binding capacity of ˜10 μg biotinylated antibody per 1 mg of beads. We pre-mixed 20 μL of antibody-coated beads (1 mg/mL) with 30-150 μL human plasma for 30 min, and then introduced the mixture into the microfluidic device. A disk magnet (Licensed NdFeB, Grade N40, 2-mm in diameter, poles on flat face) was used to retained the magnetic beads. The IGF-1R capture beads were generated by coupling mouse monoclonal IGF-1R antibody (R&D, MAB391) to surface-activated Dynabeads (M-270 Epoxy, 2.8 μm in diameter) through epoxy-amine covalent bonds. The epoxy coupling reaction was performed at 37° C. overnight with gentle shaking, following the manufacture's instruction. The typical binding capacity is ˜5-8 pg antibody per 1 mg of beads.

Patient plasma and tissue samples. Human blood samples and tumor tissues were collected from healthy donors, NSCLC and ovarian cancer patients. De-identified samples were obtained from the University of Kansas Cancer Center's Biospecimen Repository Core Facility after approval from the internal Human Subjects Committee. Table 3 provides a list of human samples used in this disclosure.

TABLE 3 Patient Smoking Treat- ID Age Sex history Cancer stage* ment Sample 1385 62 F Yes NSCLC N Plasma PT2PN1MX Lower lobe lung tumor 1357 40 F No NSCLC N Plasma PT2PN0MX Lower lobe lung tumor 1076 60 F Yes NSCLC Y Plasma PT2PN1MX Lower lobe lung tumor 1187 48 F Yes NSCLC N Plasma PT2PN0MX 6467 73 F Yes NSCLC N Plasma PT2PN0MX 4699 62 F Yes NSCLC N Plasma PT2PN1MX 3505 73 F Yes NSCLC N Plasma PT2PN0MX 4311 52 F No Healthy — Plasma 4308 52 F No Healthy — Plasma 4309 76 F No Healthy — Plasma 4310 40 F No Healthy — Plasma 4272 52 F No Healthy — Plasma 4276 42 F No Healthy — Plasma 4266 63 F No Healthy — Plasma De-identified samples and matching information were obtained from University of Kansas Cancer Center's Biospecimen Repository. *using TNM (Tumor, Node, Metastasis) pathologic staging system.

Differential ultracentrifugation and Bradford assay. The exosome-like microvesicles were prepared from frozen blood plasma (2 mL) or cell culture media. The plasma was first centrifuged at 10,800 rpm for 45 min at 4° C. using an ultracentrifuge (Thermo Scientific SORVALL WX ULTRA series centrifuge). Supernatants were then purified by two successive centrifugations for 2 hours, each at 35,800 rpm. Pellets were washed once by ultracentrifugation in 20 μL PBS, and resuspended in 20 μL PBS. The amount of pellets recovered was measured by Bradford assay (BioRad). The Bradford reagent concentrate was diluted at 1:5 ratio and mixed with 10 μL of ultracentrifucation-collected pellets. BSA standards were used to calibrate total exosome protein contents. A UV spectrometer (Beckman DU640) was used to measure the UV absorbance at 595 nm of samples in disposable cuvettes for three times. The purified microvesicles were conserved at −80° C. until use.

Nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA). Ultracentrifugation-purified vesicles were diluted in 1:50, 1:125, 1:250, and 1:500 in 1×PBS buffer in molecular grade water. NanoSight LM10 with a monochromatic 404 nm (blue) laser (NanoSight) was used to perform size analysis of 300 μL of exosome samples. Video files of 30-60 s duration with a frame rate of 25 frame per second were recorded and analyzed using the Nanoparticle Tracking Analysis software version 2.3. By monitoring the trajectory of microvesicle movement, particle number and size distribution within the range of 0-500 nm were estimated. For consistent reading, the measurement settings were optimized and five replicas were performed to obtain the averaged measurements.

Transmission electron microscopy and image analysis. Compared to nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA) by NanoSight which requires ˜1 mL of concentrated vesicles (˜109 mL-1) for accurate size determination, TEM provides a robust means for sizing and counting of exosomes in small-volumes collected from microfluidic isolation without significant dilution (˜30 μL). A two-step embedding protocol using agar and resin was developed to ensure that exosome morphology was maximally maintained under TEM imaging. The exosome-bead complexes were fixed in 2% (v/v) glutaraldehyde in PBS for 1 h, followed by two 15-min washes in PBS. Beads were re-suspended in 4% agar. After cutting the agar into 1-mm pieces, the specimen was fixed overnight in 2% (w/v) osmium tetroxide in 0.1 M cacodylate buffer kept in refrigerator. The specimen was rinsed 2 times with distilled water for 15 min each. Then the specimen was dehydrated in a graded series of ethanol: 30% for 10 min, 70% for 10 min, 95% for 10 min, 100% for 30 min, 100% for 30 min. Then the specimen was placed into a graded series of mix of pure L.R. white (hard grade) and 100% ethanol: 1:2 for 30 min, 1:1 for 30 min, 2:1 for 30 min. Then three changes of ethanol-free pure L.R. white were conducted for 30 min, and kept overnight. The resin embedded specimen was polymerized at 60° C. for 24 h. Ultra-thin sections (80 nm) were cut on Leica Ultracut-S Ultramicrotome, and counterstained with 4% (w/v) aqueous uranyl acetate for 5 min, followed by 3 min with a solution of lead acetate. The stained sections were viewed in a JEOL JEM-1400 Transmission Electron Microscope (equipped with a Lab6 gun) operated at 80 kV. Micrographs were acquired at a known scale. The size of vesicles bound to the bead surface was measured using JEM-1400 TEM software with ruler function at 20 K magnification and normalized to the scale bar.

For TEM imaging of ultracentrifugation-purified exosomes without two-step embedding, a drop of purified exosome sample, approximately 10 μg of the intact exosomes, was placed on a parafilm. A formvar carbon coated nickel grid on top of each drop was positioned gently on top of each drop for 30 minutes. The coating side is faced to the drop containing exosomes. Then the grid was washed by sequentially positioning on top of PBS drops for three times. The prepared sample was fixed by putting the grid on a drop of 2% paraformaldehyde, counterstained in 2% uranyl acetate for 15 minutes, embedded using 0.13% methyl cellulose and 0.4% uranyl acetate for 10-minute incubation, and then imaged by TEM.

Western blot analysis. Western blotting was performed using 4-12% precast polyacrylamide slab mini-gels (Tris-glycine pH 8.3) with Blot Module (BioRad), following the standard protocol. Exosome samples were lysed by adding running buffer (0.1% SDS) and heating at 65° C. for 5 min. After electrophoresis at 125 V for 2 h, gels were electrotransferred to cellulose membranes (0.2 μm) at 25 V for 2.5 h. After twice washing (1×PBS, 0.5% Tween 20, pH 7.4), the membranes were blocked with 5% dry milk overnight at 4° C. with shaking. The solution of primary antibody (1:1000) was added into blocking buffer for 2-h incubation with shaking at room temperature. After incubation, the membranes were washed 3 times for 10 min each. The secondary antibody streptavidin-HRP (Invitrogen, ELISA grade, 1.1 mg/mL) diluted 1:2500 in the blocking solution was added for 1-h incubation at room temperature with agitation.

After that, the washing step was repeated three times. The membrane was subsequently developed with Chromogenic Substrate Reagent (BioRad) until the desired band intensity was achieved. Imaging was performed by using FluorChem E (ProteinSimple) with an appropriate filter.

Three-color Immunofluorescence histology (IFH) analysis. The three-color immunofluorescence staining was performed following the standard protocol. The fresh frozen lung tumor tissues were embedded in OCT compound in cryomolds and cut into 4 μm thick cryostat sections, and mounted on superfrost plus slides. Before staining, slides were placed at room temperature for 30 min, and fixed in ice cold acetone for 5 min. After 30-min air dry, slides were rinsed with PBS-T buffer for 2 min and repeated once. 1% bovine serum albumin was used to block the tissue sections for 30 min. Lung tumor tissues exhibit strong natural biotin, thus the tissue sections were blocked with avidin and biotin solution sequentially (SP-2001, Vector Laboratories Inc) for 15 min each, and rinsed twice in PBS-T buffer for 2 min each. The primary antibodies (biotinylated mouse monoclonal anti α-IGF-1R, EpCAM, CD9, CD81, CD63) were added at 1:100 dilution. The negative control was the omission of primary antibody. The incubation was conducted overnight at 4□C. After washing with PBS-T, 0.4 μM DAPI (sc-3598, Santa Cruz Biotechnology) in PBS, avidin-FITC (1:3000, MBS538905, MyBioSource), and positive control antibody CDK2 (1:50, sc-748 Santa Cruz Biotechnology) were incubated sequentially with the tissue sections. The secondary detection antibody goat anti-rabbit IgG (F(ab′)2-PE-Cy5 (1:100, sc-3844, Santa Cruz Biotechnology) was incubated with sections for 1 hour after washing. After staining, the sections were mounted by coverslips with flourogold G mounting media (0100-01, SouthernBiotech). The stained tissue sections were imaged using an upright epi-fluorescence microscope (Nikon Eclipse 80i) equipped with the CCD camera (oneCLICK, QImaging), 40× objective (N.A.=0.75), and three color filter sets (blue, green, red). The exposure time was 1000 ms. Images were collected and merged in three-color using Metamorph. Three replicas were performed for each subjects. The fluorescence intensity was measured and normalized to the negative control using ImageJ.

Protein chemifluorescence detection. According to the Michaelis-Menten equation, at the maximum concentration of substrate (saturation), the turn-over rate of an enzymatic reaction is fastest and independent of the substrate concentration. Under the enzyme-limiting conditions, the turn-over rate rises linearly with the increase of enzyme concentration, which is reflected by converting more DiFMUP substrate to strongly fluorescent DiFMU product. Thus, by applying saturating DiFMUP concentration, a linear relationship between the rates of product conversion and the amount of enzyme presented in the second-stage magnetic chamber can be obtained. To obtain a saturating substrate concentration in the reaction chamber, a 1000 μM DiFMUP solution diluted from 10 mM stock solution of DiFMUP in DMSO was introduced for 5 min and then stopped for enzymatic reaction. Accumulation of fluorescent DiFMU during the assay occurred linearly and then reached a maximum as the equilibrium is achieved (FIG. 4E). The incubation time is an important factor for the detection in our system because the second capture chamber is not completely closed after the flow is stopped. We found that the fluorescent signal reaches maximum after 6 min incubation, which may be attributed to the balance between the enzymatic conversion and the diffusion of the fluorescent product out of the chamber. An incubation time of 6 min was applied consistently throughout all measurements. Calibration curves were generated for IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R to correlate the fluorescence signals with given protein concentrations.

Data Acquisition and Analysis. Image and video capture was performed by an upright epifluorescence microscope (Nikon Eclipse 80i) equipped with a mechanical shutter and a CCD camera (oneCLICK, QImaging) using a 4× (N.A.=0.1) or 10× objective (N.A.=0.3). The camera exposure time was set to 500 ms with a 10 MHz frequency controlled by Metamorph. A filter set (excitation 325-375 nm, emission 435-485) was used for UV illumination by a Xenon Lamp and for fluorescence detection. Image analysis was performed using ImageJ and consistent regions of interest were defined and analysed. The measured fluorescent signal was corrected for the background signal.

Standard ELISA measurement of IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R in ultracentrifugation-purified plasma exosomes. Following the protocols provided by the manufacturers, commercial ELISA kits for human IGF-1R (OK-0226, OmniKine) and IGF-1R[pYpY1135/1136] (KHO0501, Invitrogen) were used to measure the concentration of endogenous IGF-1R and pIGF-1R in human plasma derived exosomes, respectively. The plasma samples from Stage II NSCLC patients employed here match with those for the on-chip measurements. The ultracentrifugation purified exosomes were lysed by 5% Triton X-100, consistent with the on-chip lysis protocol. Then the lysates were diluted by 10 or 100 folds to prepare 100 μL standards which were then loaded into 96-well plate pre-coated with the antibody against α-IGF-1R. Each concentration was measured three times to obtain the average signal. Absorbance was read out in each well at 450 nm using a TECAN plate reader (infinite V200 pro). The background absorbance was substracted from all data points. The standard calibration curves were established by plotting the absorbance of the standard IGF-1R and pIGF-1R proteins against the standard concentrations. The concentrations for total IGF-1R and p-IGF-1R from human plasma samples were determined using the standard calibration curves.

Test of crossreactivity of IGF-1R antibodies with insulin receptor (IR). IGF-1R has over 80% homology with insulin receptor (IR) by sharing the conserved tyrosine residues that are phosphorylated2. This homology makes it difficult to differentiate the phosphorylation from total IGF-1R with IR expression level, due to the crossreactivity of many commercial phospho-IGF-1R antibodies with phosphorylated IR3-6. In our approach, p-IGF-1R molecules released from exosomes are captured by the beads coated with the antibody specific for total IGF-1R and washed to remove interfering IR protein if present. Thus it is important to ensure the specificity of the IGF-1R antibody. To this end, the crossreactivity of IGF-1R antibodies from various vendors with IR was evaluated using an Insulin Receptor β ELISA kit (KHR9111, Invitrogen) (FIG. 13). The antibodies tested here were listed in Table 1. The monoclonal antibody specific for IR (regardless of phosphorylation state) was pre-coated onto the wells of the microtiter strips. The strips 1, 2 and 3 are the replicas of strips 4, 5 and 6 (left to right). The IR antigen standard (15 ng/mL) was added to strips 1 and 4, but not in strips 2 and 5. Serial dilutions of IR (30, 15, 7.5, 3.75, 1.87, 0.94, and 0 ng/mL) were added to strip 3 and 6 as positive controls. After incubation and washing, the various IGF-1R antibodies (Table 1) were added to strip 1, 2, 4 and 5, in the order indicated in the FIG. 13 and Table 1. The antibody specific for IR was added to strip 3 and 6 for detection of standard IR as parallel control. After a second incubation and washing, horseradish peroxidase-labeled anti rabbit IgG was added and bound to the detection antibody (anti-mouse IgG HRP was used for antibody #4). Following the third incubation and washing, the substrate solution was added and the absorbance was read using a

TECAN plate reader. As shown in FIG. 13, the antibodies to total IGF-1R did not crossreact with IR. As expected, the p-IGF-1R antibodies from four different vendors showed considerable crossreactivity to IR. Thus, we selected the antibody against total IGF-1R for capture, which avoids non-specific interference and improves the specificity for p-IGF-1R detection.

EXAMPLE 6

FIG. 23 illustrates an embodiment of a microfluidic chip 20 (the “ExoSearch chip”) that provides a microfluidic continuous-flow platform for rapid exosome isolation streamlined with in-situ, multiplexed detection of exosomes. Several microfluidic approaches have been previously developed for exosome study, such as isolation, quantification, and molecular profiling. However, these platforms require either complicated fabrication or sophisticated sensing methods. Previous methods have not established the on-chip isolation and enrichment of exosomes streamlined with multiplexed detection of marker combinations. In addition, previous approaches involved off-chip exosome mixing and bead capture that lacks the ability to prepare continuous-flow enriched exosomes for variable downstream molecular characterizations. The microfluidic chip 20 combines on-chip continuous-flow mixing and immunomagnetic isolation with an in-situ, multiplexed exosome immunoassay. Compared to other microfluidic techniques, the microfluidic chip 20, provides continuous-flow operation, which affords dynamic scalability in processing sample volumes from microliter for on-chip analysis to milliliter preparation for variable downstream measurements. The processing capacity can be increased without limitation by operating in a repetitive capture-and-release manner (FIG. 24). The single-channel device is readily scaled up to multi-channel systems for high-throughput exosome immuno-isolation and analysis. The microfluidic chip 20 enables multiplexed quantification of marker combinations in one sample with improved speed (e.g., approximately 40 mins). The ExoSearch chip can be designed to specifically isolate exosome subpopulations and simultaneously measures a panel of tumor markers for better defining disease, compared to single-marker detection. Due to its design, the microfluidic chip 20 can be a viable technology in point-of-care and clinical settings.

The microfluidic chip 20, which may be fabricated of a glass substrate and a layer of poly(dimethylsiloxane), includes an injector 21. The injector 21 can include a plasma inlet 21 and a magnetic bead inlet 22. The injector 21, as seen in FIG. 23, can have a Y-shaped configuration and can include injection channels connecting the plasma inlet and the magnetic bead inlet to the serpentine fluidic mixer 24 for bead-based exosome capture (˜25.5 cm in length), and a microchamber 25 (˜4-mm in diameter) with a replaceable magnet for collection and detection of exosomes. The serpentine fluidic mixer 24 is 300 μm wide and 50 μm deep in one example. The operation candriven by a programmable microsyringe pump with picoliter resolution. The round-disk of magnet (˜2 mm diameter) was molded into PDMS where right above the microchamber 25 with 1 mm distance. The second magnet (2 mm diameter) was placed underneath the microchamber 25 with 1-mm thick glass layer in between, for generating uniform magnetic field within the microchamber 25.

The serpentine fluidic mixer 24 is in fluid communication with the injector 21. The serpentine fluidic mixer 24 is configured to mix a fluid, such as a sample with magnetic beads.

A microchamber 25 is in fluid communication with the serpentine fluidic mixer 24. The microchamber 25 is configured for the collection and detection of exosomes. In an example, the microchamber 25 is 4 mm in diameter.

An outlet 26 is in fluid communication with the microchamber 25. The microfluidic chip 20 is configured for continuous flow between the injector 23 and the outlet 26. A syringe pump may be connected to the injector 21. This syringe pump may be configured to have picoliter resolution. The microfluidic chip may only use from 10-20 μL of fluid, though other volumes are possible.

The capture and detection marker panels of the microfluidic chip 20 can be optimized for ovarian cancer.

Exosome lysis and detection of intravesicular protein markers that exosomes carry can be integrated within the microfluidic chip 20.

The raw clinical samples can be directly injected into the microfluidic chip 20 for on-line mixing and isolating exosomes. The on-chip mixing and capturing exosomes can be optimized with flow-rate for precise mechanical control. Exosome lysis can be performed in the microfluidic chip 20.

The operation can be performed in a repetitive “capture-and-release” continuous-flow manner for increasing sample processing capacity without limitation.

The low-concentration samples containing exosomes can be enriched and collected in microchamber 25 and released to conventional microcentrifuge tubes for variable downstream measurements, such as PCR, DNA sequencing, and/or mass spectrometry analysis.

The multiplexed detection of exosomal surface markers can be performed by simultaneously measuring a panel of tumor markers (e.g., three cancer markers), and differentiating individual marker expression level from the same subpopulation of exosomes based on multi-color fluorescence coding. The detection of antibodies can be encoded with different fluorescence wavelengths.

A magnet may be positioned opposite of a surface of the microfluidic chip 20. For example, the magnet may be positioned proximate the microchamber 25.

A kit can be provided. The kit can include the microfluidic device disclosed herein (e.g., the ExoSearch chip), and at least one reagent for use in analyzing a biological sample using the microfluidic device. The kit can further include magnetic beads. The magnetic beads can comprise at least one capture agent that binds with specificity to exosomes.

The exosome capture and isolation efficiency, and quantitative exosomal detection have been well characterized. As seen in Example 7, a total of 20 human subjects (n_(OvCa)=15, n_(healthy)=5) were chosen for evaluating diagnostic accuracy using the ExoSearch chip, based on receiver operator characteristic analysis of adequate sample size. Both ExoSearch and Bradford assay showed significantly increased level of exosome proteins from ovarian cancer patients, compared to healthy controls (Bradford assay p=0.001; ExoSearch chip p<0.001). Particularly, the ExoSearch chip gave individual exosomal protein expression level and the levels of CA-125 and EpCAM showed extremely significant differences between ovarian cancer patients and healthy controls (EpCAMp=0.0009;CA-125p<10-4). The area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (a.u.c.) represents the overall accuracy of a test. To determine the diagnostic accuracy of ExoSearch chip assay, the true positives (sensitivity) and false positives (one-specificity) were analyzed by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. The areas under the curves (a.u.c.) obtained for CA-125, EpCAM, and CD24 were 1.0, 1.0 and 0.91, respectively, which were comparable with standard Bradford assay (a.u.c.=1.0, 95% CI). However, the diagnostic accuracy of using exosomal particle concentrations measured by NTA with the a.u.c. was 0.67 (95% CI), likely due to the variation of NTA measurement, which gives relative large uncertainty in size and concentration. In addition, the results were consistent with recent reports showing that counting exosomes along was insufficient for cancer diagnosis and targeting specific exosome phenotypes could markedly improve the diagnostic accuracy. By ROC analysis, the ExoSearch chip assay was highly accurate in discriminating plasma exosomes from ovarian cancer patients versus healthy individuals. The above results suggested the ExoSearch chip enables sensitive multiplexed exosomal marker detection for blood-based diagnosis of ovarian cancer with significant predictive power. The combination of plasma exosomal markers CA-125, EpCAM, and CD24 provided desirable diagnostic accuracy for non-invasive, early detection of ovarian cancer.

To date, conventional tissue biopsy for pathological diagnosis of ovarian cancer is extremely invasive, as a difficult surgery. General imaging screenings, including tomography (CT) scans and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, are costly and unavailable in a majority of clinics. Therefore, blood-based assay for pre-screening is valuable and can dramatically decrease healthcare costs. The ExoSearch chip provides a cost-effective, accessible approach for specific, rapid isolation of blood diagnostic exosomes, paving the way for clinical utilization of exosomes. The ExoSearch chip in various sample cohorts and enhance disease discrimination power, including use of large-scale sample size and benign tumor group as a positive control. This ExoSearch chip could service as a basic platform for developing clinical tests in other diseases, as well as the fundamental laboratory research and biological analysis involved exosomes.

EXAMPLE 7

Tumor-derived circulating exosomes, enriched with a group of tumor antigens, have been recognized as a promising biomarker source for cancer diagnosis via less invasive procedure. Quantitatively pinpointing exosome tumor markers is appealing, yet challenging. A simple microfluidic approach (ExoSearch) was developed, which provides enriched preparation of blood plasma exosomes for in-situ, multiplexed detection using immunomagnetic beads. The ExoSearch chip offers robust, continuous-flow design for quantitative isolation and release of blood plasma exosomes in a wide range of preparation volumes (10 μL to 10 mL). The ExoSearch chip was employed for blood-based diagnosis of ovarian cancer by multiplexed measurement of three exosomal tumor markers (CA-125, EpCAM, CD24) using a training set of ovarian cancer patient plasma, which showed significant diagnostic power (a.u.c.=1.0, p=0.001) and was comparable with standard Bradford assay. This work provides a platform for utilization of exosomes in clinical cancer diagnosis, as well as fundamental exosome research.

Extracellular vesicles, particularly exosomes, are used for intercellular communications involved in many pathophysiological conditions, such as cancer progression and metastasis. Exosomes are a distinct population of small microvesicles (50˜150 nm) that are released from multivesicular bodies (MVBs) through an endolysosomal pathway, as opposed to other subcellular membrane derived vesicles. Studies have shown that exosomes are abundant in cancer patient blood. Probing of tumor-derived circulating exosomes has been emerging to better serve non-invasive cancer diagnosis and monitoring of treatment response. However, exosome biogenesis at the molecular level is still not well understood and clinical utilization of exosomes lags, due to current technical challenges in rapid isolation and molecular identification of exosomes.

The most common procedure for purifying exosomes involves a series of high-speed ultracentrifugation steps in order to remove cell debris and pellet exosomes. However, this procedure does not discriminate exosomes from other vesicular structures or large protein aggregates. Moreover, the isolation protocols are extremely tedious, time-consuming (>10 h), and inefficient especially for blood samples, making clinical application difficult. Although physical size is employed to define exosomes, this property has not completely distinguished exosomes as a specific population apart from other vesicles that originate from different cellular locations, such as apoptotic vesicles, exosome-like vesicles, membrane particles, and ectosomes. Exosomes carry a group of specific proteins, RNAs, and mitochondrial DNA, that represents their cells of origin. The molecular signature of exosomes is essential for defining exosome populations and origins. However, conventional flow cytometry for molecular marker identification is limited by detectable size (>200 nm), thereby excluding the majority of exosomes. Standard benchtop ultracentrifugation, western blotting and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) require lengthy processes, and large amounts of purified, concentrated exosomes from blood (˜2 mL) or cell culture media (˜300 mL).

A simple and robust microfluidic continuous-flow platform (ExoSearch chip) was developed for rapid exosome isolation streamlined with in-situ, multiplexed detection of exosomes. Several microfluidic approaches have been previously developed for exosome study, such as isolation, quantification, and molecular profiling. However, these platforms require either complicated fabrication or sophisticated sensing methods. A microfluidic system for integrated exosome lysis and detection of intravesicular protein markers that exosomes carry is disclosed herein. However, on-chip isolation and enrichment of exosomes streamlined with multiplexed detection of marker combinations have not been established yet. In addition, previous approach involves off-chip exosome capture using a small amount of magnetic beads and thus lacks the ability to prepare large-scale enriched exosomes for variable downstream molecular characterizations. Therefore, the ExoSearch chip was developed, which combines on-chip continuous-flow mixing and immunomagnetic isolation with an in-situ, multiplexed exosome immunoassay. Compared to other existing microfluidic methods, the ExoSearch chip provides continuous-flow operation affords dynamic scalability in processing sample volumes from microliter for on-chip analysis to milliliter preparation for variable downstream measurements. The ExoSearch chip enables multiplexed quantification of marker combinations in one sample with improved speed (e.g., approximately 40 mins). The ExoSearch chip holds the potential to as a viable technology in point-of-care and clinical settings because of its simplicity, cost-effectiveness and robustness. The one-step exosome assay enabled by the ExoSearch chip has been applied for ovarian cancer diagnosis via quantifying a panel of tumor markers from exosomes in a small-volume of blood plasma (20 μL), which showed significant diagnostic accuracy and was comparable with standard Bradford assay.

The microfluidic chip was fabricated using a 10:1 mixture of PDMS base with curing agent over a master wafer, and then bound with a microscope glass slide. The master was the pattern of SU8 photoresist on a 4-inch silicon wafer and was silanized to facilitate generation of many replicas as needed. A 2-mm magnet disk was molded into a PDMS layer during the curing process at desired location and magnet is removable for switching off magnet force. A surface treatment for PDMS chip was applied for avoiding non-specific adsorption and any bubbles generated in microchannel, using blocking buffer (2.5 w/w % BSA and 0.01 w/w % Tween-20 in 1×PBS) with 30-min flushing at flow rate of 1 μL/min. A programmable syringe pump (picoliter precision) with two 20-μL micro-syringes were used to provide optimized flow rate for continuous, on-line mixing of plasma sample and immunomagnetic beads. The magnetic beads (2.8 μm, 0.1 mg/mL) were conjugated with capture antibodies for isolating intact plasma exosomes. Washing buffer (1 w/w % BSA in 1×PBS) was applied for 5 mins after exosome capturing. A mixture of three probing antibodies (anti CA-125/A488, anti EpCAM/A550, anti CD24/A633) labeled in distinct fluorescence was introduced afterwards for 10-min incubation at slow flow rate of 100 nL/min, then followed with 5-min washing. The non-specific adsorption, specificity of probing antibodies, and incubation, were well characterized in supplementary material.

For comparison with standard benchtop approaches, differential centrifugations were carried out on the collected fresh frozen blood plasma (2 mL) to obtain exosomes. The amount of protein recovered from pellets was measured by Bradford assay (BioRad). The exosome vesicles were conserved at −80 ° C. until use. Nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA) was performed using NanoSight V2.3 following the standard protocols. By monitoring the trajectory of microvesicles movement, the particle numbers within the size range of 0-500 nm were estimated in serial dilutions. The concentrations were calibrated back to the human plasma concentration. For consistent reading, the measurement settings were optimized and five replicas were performed to obtain the average measurements. Transmission electron microscopy and image analysis were performed for characterizing exosomes morphology and size captured on beads surface. The agar and resin embedding protocols were employed to ensure that exosome morphology was maximally maintained under TEM imaging. Ultra-thin sections (80 nm) were cut on Leica Ultracut-S Ultramicrotome and viewed after counterstaining in a JEOL JEM-1400 Transmission Electron Microscope operating at 80 kV. Micrographs were prepared to a known scale, and exosome sizes were measured and calculated using TEM imaging software with ruler function at 20 K magnification and normalized to the scale bar.

Fluorescence Images were collected by an inverted epifluorescence microscope with a 20× (N.A.=0.35) Zeiss objective and a scientific CMOS camera (OptiMOS, QImaging). The camera exposure time was set to 2000 ms with a 10 MHz frequency controlled by an open source software Micro-Manager 1.4. The filter sets of FITC, Rhodamine and Cy-5 were used for multiplexed three-color fluorescence detection with LED light source for excitation. Fluorescence image analysis was performed using ImageJ with an in-house written Macro to determine 1000 points randomly across consistent regions of bead aggregates for obtaining averaged fluorescence intensity. Two fluorescence images were collected right before and after antibody detection in three fluorescence channels respectively, for calculating the difference of fluorescence signals. The measured fluorescence signal was then normalized to background.

Exosomes contain a variety of surface markers originated from their host cells. Selective isolation and specific analysis of disease-responsive exosome subpopulations is essential to evaluate clinical relevance of circulating exosomes. To this end, the ExoSearch chip is designed to specifically isolate exosome subpopulations and simultaneously measures a panel of tumor markers for better defining disease, compared to single-marker detection. As shown in FIG. 18a and detailed in Example 6, the ExoSearch chip consists of a Y-shaped injector, a serpentine fluidic mixer for bead-based exosome capture (˜25.5 cm in length), and a microchamber (4-mm in diameter) with a replaceable magnet for collection and detection of exosomes. The microchannel is 300 μm wide and 50 μm deep. Such microfluidic geometry improves on-chip mixing and magnetic bead capture compared to previous designs. The operation was simply driven by a programmable microsyringe pump with picoliter resolution. Briefly, a plasma sample and immunomagnetic beads were introduced at the same flow rate from the injection channels (FIG. 18b ) through the long serpentine channel where they are uniformly mixed to facilitate exosomes binding with the beads (FIG. 18c ). No significant aggregation of beads by interactions with exosomes or other plasma components was observed during flow mixing at the bead concentrations and flow rates used here (FIG. 18b-c ). Magnetic beads with bound exosomes can be retained as a tight aggregate in the downstream microchamber by magnetic force (FIG. 18d ). The amount of beads retained in chamber was found to be proportional to the injection volume, allowing for quantitative isolation and detection of exosomes. A mixture of antibodies labeled with unique fluorescence dyes was injected into the chamber to stain the exosomes for multi-color fluorescence imaging. Total analysis is completed with as low as 20 μL plasma samples in ˜40 mins. Alternative, the beads can be released by removing the magnet and collected off chip to yield purified and enriched exosome samples for variable benchtop measurements, such as morphological studies by transmission electron microscopy (TEM, FIG. 18e and FIG. 24). While a 20 μL sample volume was used throughout this study, the smallest sample volume that can be reliably handled was estimated to be 10 μL, given the dead volume of the system (i.e., syringes, tubing and the chip). Results showed that the magnetic bead aggregate formed in the chamber increased linearly in size by a factor of 8 with a 50-fold increase in the total injected bead number and that ˜10⁶ beads formed an aggregate of ˜1 mm in size. Based on this observation, the chamber size (4 mm in diameter), and the bead concentration used (˜10⁶/mL), it is reasonable to estimate that this device can readily process 10 mL plasma in a single continuous run. The processing capacity can be increased by operating in a repetitive capture-and-release manner (FIG. 24). The single-channel device is readily scaled up to multi-channel systems for high-throughput exosome immuno-isolation and analysis.

On-chip mixing behavior of particles in various sizes for efficient exosome isolation was characterized. First, fluorescently labeled nanoparticles (50 nm) and micro-sized magnetic beads (2.8 μm) were flowed through the ExoSearch chip, respectively, in order to mimic the mixing process for exosome isolation (FIG. 19a ). In both cases, two streams were well mixed passively by the serpentine channel, showing uniform distribution of particles across the channel width. Mixing of fluorescently labelled exosomes with antibody-conjugated microbeads was then studied. Uniform distributions of both exosome stream and the microbeads that emitted bright fluorescence due to the binding of exosomes on bead surface (FIG. 19a ) were observed. The microbeads are dominated for effective mixing which provide much faster mixing. The minimum flow travel distance required for complete mixing in the microchannel was measured for each case, which exhibited a linear semi-log response to the flow rates applied (50 to 10⁴ nL/min) (FIG. 19b ). Higher mixing efficiency was observed at relative lower flow rates for all three cases. Low-Reynolds-number conditions allow the exosomes and magnetic-bead suspension to flow side by side. Thus, complete mixing determines the effective residence time (incubation time), and in-turn determines the effective capture. In the serpentine microchannel, mixing is promoted by the Dean flow and inertial lift. For larger particles, the lift force increases rapidly and positions particles across the channel. Therefore, the micro-sized magnetic beads showed faster mixing, compared to the smaller exosomes and nanoparticles (FIG. 19 a& b). In addition, in such mixing system, the shear stress is low and particularly suitable for isolating and collecting intact exosomes. For all flow rates we studied (50 to 10⁴ nL/min), effective mixing was completely achieved, which can significantly reduce the incubation time for efficient immunomagnetic capture of exosomes. Exosome capture efficiency was investigated by comparing fluorescence intensity of flows at the inlet and outlet of capture chamber. The capture efficiency of 42%-97.3% was achieved at flow rates from 50 to 10⁴ nL/min (FIG. 19c ).

Subsequent studies were performed at the flow rate of 1 μL/min which results in a fairly good capture efficiency of 72%. This flow speed allows exosome isolation from a 20-μL plasma sample in 20 mins. For preparing enriched exosomes from large-volume samples, the throughput can be increased by using a relatively faster flow rate or expanding the single-channel device to a multi-channel system. For instance, a 2 mL of blood plasma can be processed within 3 hours (10 μL/min) without the need of manual intervention, which is at least 3 times faster than standard ultracentrifugation for processing the same amount of plasma with only 25% exosome recovery rate.

Recent studies have suggested that both tumor cells and normal cells secrete exosomes, although significantly higher amounts of exosomes have been observed from tumor cells. Therefore, specifically isolating, purifying and characterizing tumor cell derived exosomes is essential. Specificity for on-chip immunomagnetic isolation of exosomes from ovarian cancer patient blood plasma was characterized. On-chip isolation of variable exosome subpopulations was conducted by targeting both ovarian tumor-associated markers (EpCAM and CA-125) and common exosomal markers (CD9, CD81, and CD63). EpCAM is a cargo protein in exosomes and is highly overexpressed in multiple types of carcinomas, including ovarian tumor. CA-125 antigen is the most commonly measured biomarker for epithelial ovarian tumors, which accounts for 85-90% of ovarian cancer. The exosome-bound beads were washed on the chip and then released and concentrated for morphology evaluation and counting of intact exosomes using TEM, as presented in FIG. 20a . Higher amounts of round membrane vesicles (smaller than 150 nm) were observed for EpCAM+, CA-125+, and CD9+ subpopulations from ovarian cancer plasma, compared to healthy controls. Negative control beads with IgG conjugation showed negative capture of vesicles, demonstrating a good specificity of immunomagnetic isolation. The relative expression levels of five surface markers were measured by counting the number of intact exosomes bound to beads (n=25). The results showed a ˜3-5 fold increase in expression levels of five markers from ovarian cancer patient, compared to the healthy control (FIG. 20b , p=0.001).

To verify the results of on-chip isolation, nanoparticle tracking analysis (NTA) of ultracentrifugation-isolated exosomes was conducted to measure their size distribution and concentrations. In FIG. 20c , on-chip isolated exosomes (CD9+) exhibited notably narrower range with the Log-normal fitted size distribution (R²>0.98). The smaller size than 150 nm is a commonly used criterion to differentiate exosomes from larger microvesicles. Compared to ultracentrifugation approaches, microfluidic immunoaffinity isolation yields a higher percentage of vesicles smaller than 150 nm (˜79.7% vs. 60.7%), suggesting that the developed ExoSearch chip offers high specificity in isolation of circulating exosomes.

The ExoSearch chip was characterized for quantitative isolation and detection of exosomes. FIG. 21a shows the fluorescence images of exosomes isolated from serial dilutions of purified, fluorescently labeled plasma exosomes. The concentrations of purified plasma exosomes were determined by NTA measurements. Employing the same mixing and isolating conditions, increased fluorescence signals (AFL) were observed and proportional to exosome concentrations. Using fluorescently labeled anti-EpCAM as the detection antibody, exosome titration curves were obtained for a healthy plasma sample and an ovarian cancer plasma, which exhibited good linear response as seen in FIG. 21b (R²>0.98, CV=˜5%). The small variation of measurements indicates the robustness of the method. Moreover, much higher ΔFL signal (˜30-fold increase) was observed for the ovarian cancer sample, compared to the healthy control under the same concentration. These results demonstrated the ability of the ExoSeach chip in quantitative measurement of exosome surface markers for differentiating changes associated with disease. The results were in consistent with other recent reports that EpCAM is highly overexpressed in ovarian tumor exosomes. The quantitative detection of intact exosomes was achieved with a limit of detection of 7.5×10⁵ particles/mL (LOD, S/N=3), which is 1000-fold sensitive than Western blotting. While such sensitivity is comparable with that of previously reported microfluidic method, the method disclosed herein features simple fabrication, easy operation and low cost.

In-situ, multiplexed biomarker detection was then developed for rapid and quantitative microfluidic analysis of ovarian tumor derived plasma exosomes. Common exosome marker CD9 was chosen as the capture antibody for selective isolation of exosomes, because of the consistently high expression of CD9 observed from human plasma derived exosomes (FIG. 26). In addition to the established ovarian cancer biomarker CA-125, human epididymis protein 4 (HE4) has been recognized for improving diagnostic specificity of CA-125 in pathological tests. Substantial expression of HE4 from the exosome samples (FIG. 25) was not observed, which could be due to the different secretion pathway of HE4. This observation was consistent with other recent reports. Previous observations have indicated that CD24 could be a significant marker in ovarian tumor prognosis and diagnosis. Therefore, a multiplexed sandwich immunofluorescence assay was developed to quantify isolated exosomes by targeting three markers, CA-125, EpCAM, and CD24 from the same population of exosomes, as exemplified in FIG. 21c . Quantitative tests of raw human plasma collected from 20 subjects (n_(OvCa)=15, n_(healthy)=5) were conducted for three-marker classification of ovarian tumor derived exosomes, and a distinctive three-marker expression pattern was observed for ovarian cancer patients (FIG. 21d ). The average expression level of individual exosomal marker from ovarian cancer patients was statistically higher as compared to healthy controls (CD24: 3-fold increase, p=0.003; EpCAM: 6.5-fold increase, p=0.0009; CA-125: 12.4-fold increase, p<0.0001).

Non-specific adsorption of exosomes and antibody cross-reactivity were characterized in FIG. 25. The negative and positive control experiments were designed and conducted in parallel for testing four antibodies we used in this study (CA-125, EpCAM, CD24, and HE4). The slight auto-fluorescence of capture beads and negligible non-specific adsorption fluorescence were observed, and no cross-reaction observed between antibodies. The positive control (ovarian cancer patient plasma exosomes) showed strong fluorescence signals after antibodies probing (CA-125, EpCAM, and CD24). However, acceptable positive response from HE4 antibody probing was not observed, as HE4 is not expressed on exosome surface which demonstrates the negligible non-specific adsorption onto captured exosomes (FIG. 25). In addition, FIG. 21d shows low signal intensity for these three markers when their expression levels are low in healthy exosomes. This result also indicates negligible non-specific interference from non-specific antibody adsorption or cross-reactivity.

Currently, there is no single marker that can detect early-stage ovarian cancer with desired sensitivity and specificity (>98%). A large number of combinations of biomarkers have been investigated to improve diagnostic sensitivity and specificity. Circulating exosomes, enriched with a group of tumor antigens, provide a unique opportunity for cancer diagnosis using multi-marker combination. To this end, the ExoSearch chip was employed for blood-based diagnosis of ovarian cancer by simultaneously detecting three tumor antigens presented in the same exosome subpopulation. Standard Bradford assay of total protein levels in ultracentrifugation-purified exosomes from matched human subjects was performed for parallel comparison. Total of 20 human subjects (nOvCa=15, nhealthy=5) were chosen for evaluating diagnostic accuracy, based on receiver operator characteristic analysis of adequate sample size (Table 2). Both ExoSearch and Bradford assay showed significantly increased level of exosome proteins from ovarian cancer patients, compared to healthy controls (FIG. 22a , Bradford assay p=0.001; ExoSearch chip p<0.001). Particularly, the ExoSearch chip gave individual exosomal protein expression level and the levels of CA-125 and EpCAM showed extremely significant differences between ovarian cancer patients and healthy controls (EpCAM, p=0.0009; CA-125, p<10-4). The area under the receiver operator characteristic curve (a.u.c.) represents the overall accuracy of a test (Table 3). To determine the diagnostic accuracy of ExoSearch chip assay, the true positives (sensitivity) and false positives (one-specificity) were analyzed by receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves. The areas under the curves (a.u.c.) obtained for CA-125, EpCAM, and CD24 were 1.0, 1.0 and 0.91, respectively, which were comparable with standard Bradford assay (a.u.c.=1.0, 95% CI) (FIGS. 22b and 22c ). However, the diagnostic accuracy of using exosomal particle concentrations measured by NTA was relative poor with the a.u.c. of only 0.67 (FIG. 22c , FIG. 27, 95% CI). It could be attributed to the variation of NTA measurement which gives relative large uncertainty in size and concentration. In addition, the results were consistent with recent reports showing that counting exosomes along was insufficient for cancer diagnosis and targeting specific exosome phenotypes could markedly improve the diagnostic accuracy. By ROC analysis (Table 4), the ExoSearch chip assay was highly accurate in discriminating plasma exosomes from ovarian cancer patients versus healthy individuals. The above results suggested the ExoSearch chip enables sensitive multiplexed exosomal marker detection for blood-based diagnosis of ovarian cancer with significant predictive power. The combination of plasma exosomal markers CA-125, EpCAM, and CD24 provided desirable diagnostic accuracy for non-invasive, early detection of ovarian cancer (Table 4).

Because exosomes differ 5-fold in size and 104-fold in concentration in biological samples, and can contain other membrane derived subcellular structures, accurate measurement of exosome concentration in biofluids may be challenging. For conventional approaches, such as NTA and flow cytometry, exosome quantitation is limited primarily by minimum detectable vesicle sizes, resulting in relative large variation (CV=˜20%). The ExoSearch chip enables simultaneous, quantitative evaluation of multiple markers from the same exosome subpopulation with much improved measurement reproducibility (CV<10%), indicating the good robustness of this method. Such robustness may be essential for precision medicine and diagnostics involving exosomes. In addition, the continuous-flow design affords capability for obtaining distinct populations of exosomes from a wide range of preparation volumes (10 μL to 10 mL), which may be useful for downstream comparative molecular profiling or therapeutic use.

As the surrogates of tumor cells, exosomes hold great promise for precise and personalized cancer diagnosis. Combinations of exosomal protein markers may constitute a “cancer signature” and provide improved detection as the first step in multimodal screening. However, multiplexed assay of exosomes has not been well established yet. The feasibility of ExoSearch chip was demonstrated for non-invasive diagnosis of ovarian cancer using a combination of three exosomal tumor markers (CA-125, EpCAM, CD24), which showed comparable accuracy and diagnostic power (a.u.c.=1.0, p=0.001) with standard Bradford assay (a.u.c.=1.0, p=0.0009). However, the ExoSearch chip requires only 20 μL of human plasma for multiplexed detection of three tumor proteins within 40 mins, as compared to ˜1 mL of plasma and ˜12 hours required by Bradford assay.

To date, conventional tissue biopsy for pathological diagnosis of ovarian cancer is extremely invasive, as a difficult surgery. General imaging screenings, including tomography (CT) scans and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, are costly and unavailable in a majority of clinics. Therefore, blood-based assay for pre-screening is highly valuable and can dramatically decrease healthcare costs. The ExoSearch chip provides a cost-effective, accessible approach for specific, rapid isolation of blood diagnostic exosomes, paving the way for clinical utilization of exosomes. Diagnostic effectiveness of the ExoSearch chip will be further validated in various sample cohorts and enhance disease discrimination power, including use of large-scale sample size and benign tumor group as a positive control.

Reagents, antibodies, and human samples

The detection antibodies used in this study are CA-125 (B2626M, Meridian Life

Science) conjugated with Alexfluor-488, EpCAM (323/A3, Thermo Scientific Pierce) conjugated with Alexfluor-550, CD24 (eBioSN3, eBioscience) conjugated with Alexfluor-633, HE4 (EPR4743, abcam) conjugated with Cyanine 5. The capture antibodies used in this study are CD9 biotin (C3-3A2, Ancell), CD81 biotin (1.3.3.22, Ancell), and CD63 biotin (H5C6, BioLegend). Exosome capture beads (Dynal beads M-270 Streptavidin, 2.8 μm in diameter) were obtained from Invitrogen and coupled with capture antibody through biotin-streptavidin linkage per the instruction, generating typical binding capacity of ˜10m biotinylated antibody per 1 mg of beads. Antibodycoated beads (0.1 mg/mL) was introduced into microfluidic device for mixing with human blood plasma at variable flow rates precisely controlled by a programmable syringe pump. The human blood plasma were obtained from University of Kansas Cancer Center's Biospecimen Repository following consents and standard protocols.

TABLE 1 The list of human samples used in this study OvCa Patients Age Cancer Stage Treatment Sample  1. 72 III N Blood Plasma  2. 67 II N Blood Plasma  3. 70 III N Blood Plasma  4. 80 III N Blood Plasma  4. 65 III N Blood Plasma  6. 61 III N Blood Plasma  7. 76 III N Blood Plasma  8. 74 II N Blood Plasma  9. 64 III N Blood Plasma 10. 78 III N Blood Plasma 11. 66 III N Blood Plasma 12. 75 II N Blood Plasma 13. 67 III N Blood Plasma 14. 55 III N Blood Plasma 15. 53 III N Blood Plasma Age Cancer Stage Treatment Sample 1. 51 Healthy — Blood Plasma 2. 53 Healthy — Blood Plasma 3. 50 Healthy — Blood Plasma 4. 52 Healthy — Blood Plasma 5. 53 Healthy — Blood Plasma

De-identified samples and matching information were obtained from University of Kansas Cancer Center's Biospecimen Repository following consents and standard protocols.

Characterization of non-specific adsorption and cross-reactivity for on-chip immunomagnetic assay

In order to characterize the non-specific adsorption and cross-reactivity of antibodies used in this study, the negative and positive control experiments were designed and conducted in parallel. The fluorescence background of magnetic beads themselves was measured, compared with fluorescence intensity after detection antibody probing and washing, without introducing plasma exosome samples. The slight auto-fluorescence of capture beads and negligible non-specific adsorption fluorescence were observed. There is no cross-reaction between antibodies used in this study. The positive control (ovarian cancer patient plasma exosomes) showed strong fluorescence signals after antibodies probing (CA-125, EpCAM, and CD24). However, acceptable positive response from HE4 antibody probing was not observed. In order to achieve the accurate fluorescence readout, the same image threshold (0-255 grey scale) was set. Meanwhile, for each sample analysis, one image of PDMS microchamber as the background, one image of beads aggregate right before antibody probing step and one image of beads aggregate after antibody probing and washing step were collected. The difference of fluorescence signals before and after antibody probing was calculated, then normalized to background. A macro function of ImageJ was designed to randomly pick up 1000 points in the area of sample signal and measure the average of mean gray value of fluorescence intensity.

Western Blotting

Tris-glycine pH 8.3, 4-12% precast polyacrylamide slab mini-gels with Blot Module (BioRad) was used for performing Western blottings, following standard protocol. Ultracentrifugation-purified exosomes were lyzed and prepared by adding protease inhibitors and running buffer (0.1% SDS), and heating at 65° C. for 5 min. After electrophoresis at 125 V for 2 h, gels were electrotransferred to cellulose membranes (0.2 μm) at 25 V for 2.5 h in ice bucket.

After twice washing (1×PBS, 0.5% Tween 20, pH 7.4), the membranes were blocked with 5% dry milk overnight at 4° C. with shaking. The solution of primary biotinlylated antibody (1:1500) was added into blocking buffer for 2-h incubation with shaking at room temperature. After incubation, the membrane was washed 3 times for 10 min each. The secondary antibody streptavidin-HRP (Invitrogen, ELISA grade, 1.2 mg/mL) diluted 1:2500 in the blocking solution was added for 1-h incubation at room temperature with agitation. After that, the washing step was repeated three times. The membrane was subsequently developed with chromogenic substrate reagent (BioRad) until the desired band intensity was achieved. Imaging was performed by using ChemiDoc imager (BioRad).

Sample Size Justification

Estimating the required sample size to adequately train developed diagnostic assay is of great practical importance. The required sample size for evaluating diagnostic accuracy was calculated by comparing the area under a ROC curve with a null hypothesis value of 0.5. The sample size takes into account the required significance level of 0.05 and 80% power of the test. The statistical power 0.8 and sample ratio of 3 were chosen for statistical judgment with 0.2 probability of type I error a and 0.2 probability of type II error. Thus the sample size computational table was listed below in Table 2. The sample size of total 20 (15 ovarian cancer patients and 5 healthy controls) is adequate to evaluate diagnostic accuracy with acceptable diagnostic power.

TABLE 2 Sample size justifications with desired errors Type I error-α 0.20 0.05 Type II error-β 0.20 15 + 5 27 + 9  0.05 27 + 9 42 + 14

Diagnostic Accuracy

Sensitivity and specificity are terms used to evaluate a clinical test. Receiver operator characteristic curve is a plot of (1-specificity) of a test on the x-axis against its sensitivity on the y-axis for all possible cut-off points. The area under this curve (a. u. c.) represents the overall accuracy of a test, with a value approaching 1.0 indicating a high sensitivity and specificity. The a.u.c. is a global measure of diagnostic accuracy. By comparison of areas under ROC curves, an estimate of which one of the tests is more suitable for distinguishing health from disease can be performed. The accuracy classification for a diagnostic test is listed below.

TABLE 3 Accuracy classification by a.u.c. for a diagnostic test a.u.c. Range Classification 0.9 < a.u.c. < 1.0 Excellent 0.8 < a.u.c. < 0.9 Good 0.7 < a.u.c. < 0.8 Worthless 0.6 < a.u.c. < 0.7 Not good

The specificity and sensitivity were statistically analyzed using receiver operator characteristic curves for on-chip measurements (expression levels of CA=125, EpCAM, and CD24), compared to conventional benchtop measurements (Bradford assay of total exosome protein, and NTA of exosome particle concentration), from 20 human subjects (nOvCa=15, nhealthy=5). On-chip assay of multiple exosomal proteins showed excellent diagnostic accuracy (CA-125 a.u.c.=1.0; EpCAM a.u.c.=1.0; CD24 a.u.c.=0.91), which was comparable with conventional Bradford assay of total exosome proteins (a.u.c.=1.0). However, NTA assay of exosome concentration was unable to give acceptable accuracy using particles number as the diagnostic value (a.u.c.=0.67).

TABLE 4 Diagnostic accuracy analysis using the receiving operating characteristic curve Bradford Assay/ ExoSearch chip Total Exosomal NTA/Particle Test Variables CA125 EpCAM CD24 Protein Concentration ROC Curve Area 1.000 1.000 0.9067 1.000 0.6750 Standard Error 0.000 0.000 0.0903 0.000 0.1332 95% Confidence Interval 1.000 To 1.000 1.000 To 1.000 0.729 To 1.084 1.000 To 1.000 0.413 To 0.936 P Value 0.0010 0.0010 0.0078 0.0009 0.2477

While the disclosure has been particularly shown and described with reference to specific embodiments (some of which are preferred embodiments), it should be understood by those having skill in the art that various changes in form and detail may be made therein without departing from the scope of the present disclosure as disclosed herein. Hence, the present invention is deemed limited only by the appended claims and the reasonable interpretation thereof. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A microfluidic chip comprising: an injector including a plasma inlet and a magnetic bead inlet; a serpentine fluidic mixer in fluid communication with the injector, wherein the serpentine fluidic mixer is configured to mix a fluid; a microchamber in fluid communication with the serpentine fluidic mixer, wherein the microchamber is configured for collection and detection of exosomes; and an outlet in fluid communication with the microchamber, wherein the microfluidic chip is configured for continuous flow between the injector and the outlet, and wherein the microfluidic chip is configured to provide exosome capture and lysis in the microfluidic chip.
 2. The microfluidic chip of claim 1, wherein the microchamber is 4 mm in diameter.
 3. The microfluidic chip of claim 1, wherein the injector is Y-shaped and includes injection channels connecting the plasma inlet and the magnetic bead inlet to the serpentine fluidic mixer.
 4. The microfluidic chip of claim 1, further comprising at least one syringe pump connected to the injector, wherein the syringe pump is configured to have picoliter resolution.
 5. The microfluidic chip of claim 1, further comprising a magnet positioned opposite of a surface of the microfluidic chip.
 6. The microfluidic chip of claim 1, wherein the microfluidic chip is fabricated of a glass substrate and a layer of poly(dimethylsiloxane).
 7. The microfluidic chip of claim 1, wherein the microfluidic chip is configured to use from 10 μL to 20 μL of fluid to analyze a biological sample.
 8. A kit comprising the microfluidic chip of claim 1, and at least one reagent for use in analyzing a biological sample using the microfluidic chip.
 9. The kit of claim 8, further comprising magnetic beads.
 10. The kit of claim 9, wherein the magnetic beads comprise at least one capture agent that binds with specificity to exosomes.
 11. A method of diagnosis, or for aiding in diagnosis, or for monitoring treatment of a subject comprising processing a sample obtained or derived from the subject with the microfluidic chip of claim 1, wherein the method comprises detecting a signal from a detectably labeled antibody, wherein the antibody is specifically bound to a protein marker that was present in exosomes in the sample obtained or derived from the subject, wherein the presence of the protein marker is positively correlated with a condition that the subject is at risk for developing, is suspected of having, or has been diagnosed with, wherein the signal from the detectably labeled antibody is generated in the microchamber.
 12. The method of claim 11, wherein the sample comprises plasma.
 13. The method of claim 11, wherein the protein marker is a cancer marker.
 14. The method of claim 11, wherein a continuous flow of the sample is provided to the microfluidic chip for processing volumes from 10 μL to 10 mL in a single run.
 15. The method of claim 11, wherein the sample is injected into the microfluidic chip for on-line mixing and isolating exosomes.
 16. The method of claim 15, wherein the sample is continuously injected in a repeating capture-and-release continuous flow manner.
 17. The method of claim 11, further comprising: releasing a sample including exosomes from the microchamber of the microfluidic chip; and performing at least one measurement on the sample.
 18. The method of claim 11, wherein multiplexed detection of exosomal surface markers is performed by simultaneously measuring a panel of tumor markers and differentiating an individual marker expression level from a subpopulation of exosomes based on multi-color fluorescence coding. 